Universal Consciousness Inc. https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com Promoting Health and Wellness, Peace, Love, Light & God Consciousness Wed, 28 Aug 2019 03:22:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/cropped-P15-32x32.jpg Universal Consciousness Inc. https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com 32 32 https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/89270-2/ Wed, 28 Aug 2019 01:34:02 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=89270 ]]>

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Solfeggio Multidimensional Release https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/solfeggio-multidimensional-release/ Sat, 17 Mar 2018 13:54:52 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=9402

Solfeggio Multidimensional Release Course, taught by Kaia. See his interview with Dr. Ra Below. 

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Solfeggio Multidimensional Release Course, taught by Kaia. See his interview with Dr. Ra Below. 

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Kaia on Energy Healing https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/kaia-on-energy-healing/ Thu, 08 Mar 2018 13:52:17 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=7937

Dr. Ra Heter interview with Kaia, Reki Master Teacher and Author  

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Dr. Ra Heter interview with Kaia, Reki Master Teacher and Author

 

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Dr. Ra Heter on Your Soul’s Partner https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/dr-ra-heter-your-souls-partner/ Thu, 08 Mar 2018 13:43:45 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=7934

Dr. Ra Heter explains how the seven aspects of the self are connected to the seven chakras and how our soul’s partner is the person to help us learn lessons so that we are able evolve spiritually.

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Dr. Ra Heter explains how the seven aspects of the self are connected to the seven chakras and how our soul’s partner is the person to help us learn lessons so that we are able evolve spiritually.

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About Us https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/7925-2/ Thu, 08 Mar 2018 12:00:40 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=7925 We know that negative and dark forces threaten the planet and our very existences.  We believe that if enough people work on healing themselves and send out love and light energy daily, we can raise the energetic vibration on Earth to counter these negative and dark forces. Our mission is to join the global movement […]

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We know that negative and dark forces threaten the planet and our very existences.  We believe that if enough people work on healing themselves and send out love and light energy daily, we can raise the energetic vibration on Earth to counter these negative and dark forces. Our mission is to join the global movement to heal humanity and the planet by providing information that promote health and wellness, peace, love, light and God Consciousness.  Please join our community so that as we grow and expand you can grow and expand with us.

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Sonbonfu’ Some https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/sonbonfu-some/ Wed, 07 Mar 2018 19:24:06 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=7876

  Sonbonfu Some’ on what intimacy is and how it develops.

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Sonbonfu Some’ on what intimacy is and how it develops.

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I Am Still Wanting Someone from My Youth https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/i-am-still-wanting-someone-from-my-youth/ Fri, 02 Mar 2018 16:43:38 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=5677

Dr. Ra: I am still wanting someone from my youth and high school days. I am always regretting not being there for her and our dreams. I am finding myself hoping that somehow, some way that we find our love and relationship again before we leave earth. Both of us have married and moved forward […]

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Dr. Ra: I am still wanting someone from my youth and high school days. I am always regretting not being there for her and our dreams. I am finding myself hoping that somehow, some way that we find our love and relationship again before we leave earth. Both of us have married and moved forward personally. I love her so much and missed my opportunity to have a life with her. I can’t stop thinking about what should have been. What should I do? I have not told her how I feel these past years and days. Please help me. Your assistance and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

Still Wanting Someone from My Youth

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Dear:  Still Wanting Someone from My Youth

It seems you are living in the past vs. living in the present focused on what could have been vs. what is. It also seems you are still grieving the loss of her and the lives you dreamed together, and have not gotten closure because you never got a chance to talk it out and/or work through your feelings. In addition, it seems you have not forgiven yourself. I want to suggest bringing closure by writing a letter saying everything you need to say and crying it out to release the energy attached to the feelings and then discarding the letter. However, this may be too risky, because you are married. Can you find a friend or confident to talk to? Or have you considered seeing a therapist–someone to talk it out with.

What can also help is to re-think how you are thinking about your lost love. Are you in love with her or a fantasy of her? Although who people are at the cores does not change much, because she is married and has grown, she might be different in a lot of ways than she was when you were in high school. The girl of your youth is now a married woman.

Constantly thinking about her may detract from the quality of your current marriage. Did you learn the lessons from that relationship and are you applying them to your marriage? Or are you fantasizing about your lost love as a distraction from issues in your marriage? If both you and the love of your youth have no intentions of leaving your marriages and reviving the relationship, then you should probably let her and the dream go, forgive yourself, and move on. Hopefully, you married the woman you are with for the right reasons. If you plan to continue the marriage, take wisdom from the song recorded by Billy Preston in the early 1970s—“If you can’t be with the one you love, then love the one you’re with,” focus your attention there, find happiness with her and do the best you can to build a great life together.

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How to Create that Spark Again https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/how-to-create-that-spark-again/ Thu, 01 Mar 2018 21:19:48 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=5606

Hi Dr Ra…. I have been married for 20 yrs and we no longer seem to be stimulating each other. Can you give us some suggestions on creating that spark again? Trying to find that spark again ~~~~~~~~~~ Dear: Trying to find that spark: Many couples lose the spark because they fail to commit to […]

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Hi Dr Ra…. I have been married for 20 yrs and we no longer seem to be stimulating each other.
Can you give us some suggestions on creating that spark again?

Trying to find that spark again

~~~~~~~~~~

Dear: Trying to find that spark:

Many couples lose the spark because they fail to commit to putting the time and energy into nurturing their relationship or marriage. Finding that spark again can begin with thinking about when you first met and what it was about each other that stimulated you. What was it about each other and/or what you did you do together that stimulated you to want to date each other and eventually marry. If it is just about stimulating each other some suggestions might be to:

  1. Really think about what you like about each other and find ways to stimulate that in each other (sometimes couples focus too much on what they do not like about each other).
  2. Think about what you really enjoy doing, put forth serious effort to do it and then make a commitment to make it a part of your lives.
  3. Get out your environment into a different environment. For example go to a hotel, spend the night at relative’s or friend’s house; travel to a new place if you can
  4. Explore and incorporate new, exciting and fun things in your lives—like joining a couples group, taking a class together, e.g. cooking, tantra; going on a spiritual healing retreat, etc. (Make sure it is something that you both enjoy doing)

Of course all of these suggestions include talking and listening attentively to each other. If it is the case that you are no longer stimulating each other because of things that did or did not happen over the course of your 20 year marriage, unmet expectations, unrealized dreams, etc. which created emotional distance (which is different from just needing a spark), then you may need to first focus on healing yourselves and the relationship. Once you do that you may be able to stimulate the energy that is needed to find that spark again.

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Marriage Isn’t for Black Women https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/marriage-isnt-for-black-women/ Tue, 27 Feb 2018 12:32:29 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=5334

by TIFFANIE DRAYTON FEB 15, 2018 The system disadvantages African Americans so severely that tying your life to another person legally can make matters worse, not better. I don’t want to get married and the reason why is complicated. My lack of desire to tie the knot is not because I do not have a significant […]

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My lack of desire to tie the knot is not because I do not have a significant other that I love. I’ve adored my partner since the moment I first saw him playing basketball alone at a local park.

“Hey, can I shoot with you?” I asked him with a bit of hesitation.

“Yeah, if you wanna,” he coolly responded.

In our time together, we’ve continually managed to gracefully overcome standard relationship issues, like establishing sexual boundaries and making time for one another despite hectic schedules. Since our chance meeting that day at the park, I’ve had a partner in the true sense of the word.

We even recently became parents together. He held my right leg and counted down from ten on every contraction, while I pushed our baby girl into the world. He beamed at her with love as she snuggled on his chest during “skin-to-skin” time. Then he looked up at me, still grinning, and any fears I ever had that we would not last vanished for good. I finally felt confident enough in our relationship to say “yes” to the big question.

And yet, I’m hesitant to actually walk down the aisle.

“How do you feel about getting married?” he asked casually over dinner a few months after bringing our baby home from the hospital. I shrugged and stared at my plate, trying to avoid eye contact. The silence was deafening.

Dating is a numbers game—one that is rigged against me and women who look like me.

About 6 years ago, I picked up a book titled Is Marriage For White People? How the African American Marriage Decline Affects Everyone by Ralph Richard Banks. I was a 21-year-old college student trying to find a committed, respectful relationship in the midst of New York City hook-up culture. Men were more interested in getting a drink and going back to my place than they were in my name, let alone my hobbies or passions. I blamed all my bad dates on the city’s commitment-phobic dating scene.

But the problem isn’t where I lived. Female friends all over the country are having difficulties finding a partner worth marrying, especially if they’re black. A close friend thought she was having a baby with the love of her life whom she would eventually marry, only to find out that he got another woman pregnant.

“Mixed babies are cuter,” he told her when she found out. He’d already branded their black fetus less desirable than the one he created with a white woman.

“There are no black guys on my campus,” one girlfriend lamented to me recently about her university, where she feels dating options are severely limited. And whenever I meet very successful middle-aged black women, they’re typically single and without children. Banks’ book laid out the reason why plainly: Dating is a numbers game—one that is rigged against me and women who look like me.

Getty Images

“All of the guys I grew up with are either dead or locked up,” my partner once explained as we drove through the Jersey City neighborhood of his childhood. There is a crisis in the black community. A health crisis. An education crisis. An incarceration crisis. A violence crisis. Black men are disproportionately losing the fight to overcome those crises, while black women are desperately trying to flourish, creating an imbalance of available men versus women.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, of associate’s and bachelor’s degrees awarded to black students between 2013 and 2014, more than 60 percent went to black women. Meanwhile, Michelle Alexander points out in her book The New Jim Crowthat there are more black men under correctional control today than there were under slavery in 1850—at least 1.7 million, to be precise—limiting their opportunities for education and employment. Black men are roughly seven times more likely to be killed than black women.

Even if black men overcome all this—if they survive, if they thrive—they do not want to marry a woman like me. Black men are twice as likely as black women to seek marriage outside of their race. Statistics collected by OkCupid reveal that black women are the least desirable demographic in the dating pool.

Because of these realities, I had resigned to the idea that there would be no “I do” in my future. I was okay with being alone. I was going to travel the world and adopt kids.

Still, secretly, I wanted a loving spouse and children of my own.

That view of my future drastically changed when my casual request to shoot hoops was accepted. Not only did I find a black man who wanted to love me, but I also felt he was worthy of my love.

I had hit the jackpot: My guy loved black women, had never been to jail, had a master’s degree in social work, and was dedicated to fatherhood and his career. I beat the odds that insisted I would never find a suitable partner to marry.


But finding a spouse is only half the equation. Marriage should create a safety net for couples, but for some black women like me, it just means a whole host of new problems to navigate.

While I was worried about finding a suitable guy, I overlooked the ways that I could be “unsuitable.” I failed to recognize that America disincentives marriage for black women trying to bootstrap their way out of the generational hardship created by centuries of disenfranchisement and discrimination. In my current financial circumstance, being a single mother is better than a married woman.

Stocksy

Women hold the lion’s share (read: two-thirds) of this country’s student debt. What’s more, black women leave college with more debt than women of any other race. A third of black women who got a bachelor’s degree between 2011 and 2012 left with more than $40,000 in student loan debt, compared to just 10 percent of white women.

We then have the hardest time paying these loans back, thanks to persistent gender and racial wage gaps: In 2016, the median weekly earning for white women was $766, for black women it was just $641. That’s $500 per month that could have gone to expenses like these payments.

These statistics aren’t just numbers for me. I, like so many other educated black women, am a financial liability. Not only did I leave college with tens of thousands of dollars in student loan debt, but I have struggled for years to find full-time work, despite sending out resume after resume.

I am not alone.

Black women are twice as likely to be unemployed, compared to white women, according to the Bureau of Labor. And while some would pin this on black women being more likely to work in fields with lower pay, that fails to acknowledge the reality of name-based hiring discrimination. A field experiment, in which the same resume was sent to various employers, with only the name at the top changed, discovered a hard-to-swallow truth that black people have long known: “Emily” and “Greg” are simply more employable than “Lakisha” and “Jamal”—even if they all have the same credentials. Say I continue to be under-employed, my investment in my education proving a waste, I could, if we were married, harm my partner’s credit, currently our only life line.

Financial strain seems ubiquitous and unavoidable for most black families.

It’s not just that getting hitched could potentially harm our finances—there are actual, tangible costs. The new Pay As You Earn plan (revised in 2015), which determines student loan payment caps, helps single earners, but can drastically increase monthly payments for married couples. As a single, lower-income mother, I qualify for health insurance through the Affordable Care Act, which also covers my baby. Marriage would afford us access to family health insurance plans, but the average for family health insurance premiums is about $600 more per month than it is for a single adult’s.

And those marriage-related tax benefits? Many families with a low-income earner experience a marriage penalty, usually because their income combined with their spouse’s disqualifies them for the Earned Income Tax Credit. This disqualification could cost us as much as $6,000 come tax time. Filing jointly as a married couple has zero benefits for us.

Many people reading this probably think that’s part of what the institution of marriage is all about: Taking on one another’s commitments and supporting each other through financial hardship. Those people do not understand that this country’s institutions constantly fail black people. They do not know about the median $100,000 wealth gap between black and white families, generated by centuries of discrimination and oppression. They cannot grasp the harsh reality that America promised opportunities to black people who chose to embark on the quest for higher education, but in reality saddled us with mountains of debt. They do not know that redlining confined us to subpar neighborhoods with subpar schools. That the justice system continues to prey on us, instead of protect us. They cannot fathom an existence where they are labeled “undesirable” simply because of the color of their skin.

I choose to fight against these hardships by remaining unmarried. I’ve made decisions that ensure we have access to basic resources like healthcare, food in the fridge, and, potentially, savings to buy a house.

If that means I have to forfeit the fairy tale wedding, then so be it. If that means I must bear the brand of “black single mother,” then so be that, too. I give you, America, permission to label me as you see fit. I long stopped believing in American dreams.

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Am I Still a Mother? https://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/am-i-still-a-mother/ Wed, 21 Feb 2018 23:54:47 +0000 http://www.universalconsciousnessinc.com/?p=4957

Dear Dr. Ra: I lost my only son years when he was in his 20s to a battle with HIV-AIDS. I still feel like he is still with me. I keep his memory alive and celebrate his life every year by putting an ad in the newspaper on his birthday. He has been gone for […]

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Dear Dr. Ra:
I lost my only son years when he was in his 20s to a battle with HIV-AIDS. I still feel like he is still with me. I keep his memory alive and celebrate his life every year by putting an ad in the newspaper on his birthday. He has been gone for over 20 years, and I still do not know how to respond when people ask me if I have children  or how many children I have. I am not even sure if I still to be considered to be a mother. Am I still mother?
Not Sure If I Am Still a Mother

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Dear Not Sure Mother:
I am so sorry to hear that you loss your only son. You are still a mother. You had a child and he was in your life for over 20 years. When people ask you whether you have children, you can say, yes, I had a beautiful son (or however you describe him) but he passed how ever many years ago it was.

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