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"Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend. Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow."

~ Melody Beattie

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Wheatgrass Uses

Christy & Doug, We took a wheatgrass bath, we put about 2ozs in a hot bath and soaked for about 30 minutes then went to bed and covered completely up to our necks and sweated the toxins out. That night we both were detoxing in the night, sweating a lot and it was cold. So it is definitely beautiful as a bath soak to detox.

We have been swishing the wheatgrass in our mouths for about 3 minutes before we swallow so the saliva can start the enzymes so it is easily digested. We made a wheat grass masque two nights.

We mixed 1oz with a hydrating masque the first night and 1oz with a clay masque. Very cleansing and very hydrating. It felt like the skin could breath better. I had a few cat scratches on my hand from playing rough with Elohim and after we wheatgrassed each morning I would get a Band-Aid and put some wheatgrass juice on the pulp and put it on the the scratches. By the next day they were healing. This stuff is amazing and we love it, respect it, and we are grateful. The energy in your wheatgrass is full of healing and not blocked or limited to one healing and open to all healing. The taste is very sweet and gentle and very effective. Just the smell is very healing. We feel the love, respect, and gratitude in this wheatgrass and that is what makes it exceptional. Thank you for sharing.

In Love and Light Tammy
Our Feelings & the Legend of Hotei
(2 Votes)
Hotei, our sweet little chubby fellow, was a Buddhist Zen Monk who wandered carrying a linen sack full of many precious items, including candy for children, food and the woes of the world.
He most certainly is a loving cheerful character.
He is a symbol of happiness, laughter and the wisdom of contentment... all of which we desire in our life's journey.

These are all characteristics that most religions in the world can agree upon...to live selflessness, of good character and sound mind and all want to help you on your personal journey to enlightenment and contentment.


The Legend...
Hotei is one of the Shichi Fukujin, the seven Japanese Shinto-gods of luck. He is the god of happiness, laughter and the wisdom of contentment, and is the patron of the weak and children, fortune tellers and bartenders.

Hotei is distinguished by his body of generous proportions and round stomach exposed beneath loose robes. His big belly is a symbol of happiness, luck and generosity. On his back he carries a huge linen bag containing precious things and gifts of good fortune, including children. He also holds an uchiwa, a flat fan of Chinese orgin used by ancient chieftains as an emblem of authority and wish granting. He may sit in an old cart drawn by boys, as the Wagon Priest, and can be compared with the Buddhistic Mi-lo-Fo.

In Chinese Buddhism he is known as Budai, the Loving or Friendly One. He was a wandering Chan Buddhist monk who lived in the ninth century. At his death between 901 and 903, he recited a poem that revealed to the world that he was in fact the Bodhisattva Maitreya in disguise.

Maitreya, Chinese Buddhists believe, is the future buddha, who will return to the world and bring innumerable individuals to salvation. This concept of hope for the suffering, combined with Budai's pleasing, human features, made him a most popular Buddhist deity. It was not until the sixteenth century that he was canonised as the sixteenth and last Chinese bodhisattva.

According to Chinese legend he carried a sack of candy to give to children. He is sometimes worshipped as a god of good luck and prosperity. He is always represented as very stout, with the breast and upper abdomen exposed to view. His face has a widely grinning or laughing expression, and he is also known as the Laughing Buddha. He stands in the first hall of the Buddhist monastery. Because of his constant good nature, he has become the symbol of philosophical contentment.
 
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