Luminous Life: How the Science of Light Unlocks the Art of Living - Softcover

Liberman OD PhD, Jacob Israel

 
9781608685172: Luminous Life: How the Science of Light Unlocks the Art of Living

Inhaltsangabe

The secrets of light ― Your pathway to a state of presence

Seeking a state of presence: The most important things in life are our health and happiness. Yet most of us are neither healthy nor happy. We have been led to believe that if we think ahead and make the right choices, we can manifest our dreams. Yet despite our best efforts, we still have more disease and discontent than ever before. Is it possible that our essential ideas about life are flawed? Can we learn how to get into the zone or a flow state? Is light the key to finding a state of presence?

Living in the light: We are all aware of the impact of sunlight on a plant’s growth and development. But few of us realize that a plant actually “sees” where light is emanating from and positions itself to be in optimal alignment with it. This phenomenon, however, is not just occurring in the plant kingdom ― humans are also fundamentally directed by light.

The intersection of science and spirituality: In Luminous Life, Dr. Jacob Israel Liberman integrates scientific research, clinical practice, and direct experience to demonstrate how the luminous intelligence we call light effortlessly guides us toward health, contentment, and a life filled with purpose.

If you have read Barbara Brennan’s Hands of Light or Light Emerging, you’re going to love Jacob Liberman’s Luminous Life.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Author of Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Luminous Life

How the Science of Light Unlocks the Art of Living

By Jacob Israel Liberman, Gina Liberman, Erik Liberman

New World Library

Copyright © 2018 Jacob Israel Liberman
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-60868-517-2

Contents

Foreword by James L. Oschman, PhD,
Introduction,
Chapter One: How Light Guides Us,
Chapter Two: The Light within Us,
Chapter Three: Living on Light,
Chapter Four: The Intelligence of Life,
Chapter Five: The Light in Our Dreams,
Chapter Six: Escaping the Mind Field,
Chapter Seven: Discovering the Genius within Us,
Chapter Eight: Awareness Is Curative,
Chapter Nine: What Takes Your Breath Away,
Chapter Ten: The True Law of Attraction,
Chapter Eleven: Full-Spectrum Life,
Chapter Twelve: Living in a World of Technology,
Chapter Thirteen: Looking Less, Seeing More,
Chapter Fourteen: What's Catching Your Eye?,
Epilogue,
Acknowledgments,
Notes,
Resources,
Index,
About the Authors,


CHAPTER 1

How Light Guides Us


Whether in the intellectual pursuits of science or in the mystical pursuits of the spirit, the light beckons ahead, and the purpose surging in our nature responds.

— Arthur Stanley Eddington


At daybreak in a large lake on the island of Palau in the Philippine Sea, a dance begins. Millions of golden jellyfish, each the size of a teacup, race east toward the light of the rising sun. Once they reach the sun's early morning rays, they halt. Then slowly, as the sun makes its way east to west, the jellies follow its arc. As dusk falls these unique invertebrates come to rest on the lake's western shore. The following morning, the dance begins again.

These jellies are just one of countless species whose life journeys are guided by the sun's light. According to marine biologists, humpback whales use sunlight, along with the stars and the earth's magnetic pull, to guide their ten-thousand-mile yearly migrations. Despite ocean currents, the whales swim in a straight line — north to feed and south to mate — varying less than one degree longitude from year to year.

Each fall in Antarctica, emperor penguins march, single file, on a treacherous seventy-mile journey inland to their breeding grounds. Once there, they pair off and mate. After the female lays an egg, she carefully transfers it to the feet of the male, who incubates it in the space between the base of his belly and the top of his feet. The female then returns to the ocean in search of food. For two months, the males huddle together without food, balancing the eggs on top of their feet, while temperatures descend to one hundred degrees below zero Fahrenheit and wind speeds reach one hundred miles per hour. In an intricate dance, the males on the inside of the group move toward the periphery as their body temperatures rise, while those on the outside gradually move in to get warm. Later, after the females return and the chicks hatch, the penguins trek en masse seventy miles back to the sea, as if they were one organism — each one a cell in an intricately connected body of life.

In addition to jellies, whales, and penguins, many other creatures — ranging from butterflies to songbirds — take part in extraordinary migratory journeys guided by something outside themselves that is inseparably aligned with something inside them. When we learn about such feats, we often marvel at these creatures' amazing ability to travel from point A to point B. In the absence of maps, printed directions, and GPS technology, how do they find their way to their locations — never varying their routes, never getting lost, never second-guessing themselves, and never bickering with one another about the right route to take?

Most of us only hear about these stories on the Discovery channel or from documentaries such as March of the Penguins. But when we come upon this phenomenon in our own lives, it stops us in our tracks and makes us realize that we miss a lot of activity happening around us.

When I moved into a rented cottage on Maui, Hawaii, some years ago, I found a little Russian Blue cat with gray fur and yellow eyes sitting on the porch staring at me. I learned that she was feral and that my neighbor Koa called her Pepper, and that she came by around the same time every day. I bought a few cans of cat food from a nearby market, opened one, and left it on the porch. She gobbled it up, so I left food and water on the porch and each day Pepper came to eat. This went on for five months, and we began to grow friendly toward one another.

One day I saw Koa carrying a cardboard box with Pepper inside.

"Where are you taking her?" I asked.

"I have a friend on the other side of the island who wants her."

The friend lived thirty-five miles away, and though I was fond of Pepper, I knew it was for the best as I was leaving for Europe within a few days.

Three months later, after a friend picked me up from the airport and drove me back to the cottage, I found Pepper waiting there for me.

Surprised, I stepped over to Koa's cottage. "When did you bring Pepper back?"

"I didn't."

Together we walked back to my cottage. Once he saw the cat, Koa said, "Oh my God." Then he called his friend and asked, "Why did you bring the cat back?"

The friend replied, "I didn't. She ran away almost as soon as you dropped her off. I never saw her again."

Amazed that she had found her way home at the very moment I arrived, I renamed her Lani, which means "heaven" in Hawaiian. Soon I moved to a new home and I took her with me.

To us, such a journey sounds impossible, especially if we often find ourselves lost within an unfamiliar city or even just within a mall parking lot. In reality, we humans are equipped with the same guidance technology as jellies, whales, and these other amazing creatures. Birds, for instance, appear to have a built-in compass in their eyes, as their retinas contain high concentrations of the light-sensitive protein cryptochrome, which affords them the ability to detect the earth's magnetic field. But cryptochrome is not unique to birds; it is a prehistoric protein found in microbes, plants, and animals that helps control daily rhythms and the detection of magnetic fields in an increasing number of species. Some researchers believe that birds can actually see these invisible fields superimposed above their normal vision.

Humans were thought to have only five senses, while animals such as birds, whales, and turtles had a sixth sense that allows them to orient themselves during these long migrations. Recently, however, a team of scientists from the University of Massachusetts Medical School found that the human eye also contains high concentrations of cryptochrome. Moreover, when the human cryptochrome gene is implanted into a fruit fly, after its normal magnetic sixth sense has been altered, it restores its ability to sense magnetic fields like its normal peers. These experiments demonstrate that human cryptochrome can act as a magnetic sensor, suggesting that we too may be equipped with such a sixth sense, aligning us with the intricate navigational system of the planet.

One obvious difference between these animals and us: they do not override their inner guidance system with thinking. They do not question the arc of the sun. They do not choose to follow or not follow it. They do not trust the light, nor do they distrust it. They merely follow the light as it leads them to their destination....

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