20 January 2010

Voice Dialogue Tips

Voice Dialogue Tips

January 2010

Email us: jcoroneos@bigpond.com

From Dr John Coroneos

Dear Participant

I thought you may be interested to know that our new inspirational feature film ‘Being in Heaven' is opening at the cinemas!

Michael Domeyko Rowland, who you may remember was the presenter and director of Hal and Sidra's Voice Dialogue/Psychology of Selves 12 part video series, is the writer and director of the film. He also acts in it.

I am the co-producer, with Paulina Rowland. If you are interested in subpersonalities and higher states of consciousness, you will love this film.

It is a story for those interested in Personal Development and moving their lives forward to new and more fulfilling experiences. It is a journey of revelation and awakening, where you discover how a single conversation can transform your life and set you on a path of freedom and personal happiness.

Young and successful, Jason Masterman, an Australian working in New York, loses everything in a financial crash. He encounters a mysterious writer who specialises in uplifting people's lives and teaching how it is possible to access the higher potentials you have within you.

Jason undergoes a transformation that will surprise and inspire you, and shows that moving forward, and even radically changing one's life, is possible for anyone.

Prepare to be stimulated and amazed!

To view the trailer and all screening details please go to: www.beinginheaven.com.au

Everyone who attends any cinema will receive a complimentary gift (see website).

Opening at Palace Cinemas, Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane on January 28th. You can book your ticket right now!

Are you ready to be transformed forever?

Kind Regards,

Dr. John Coroneos


P.S. If you would like to forward this email onto any friends or clients, we would much appreciate it. Here below are some paragraphs describing the film, should they be useful to you.

Suggestions for communicating awareness of the film:

Our All Australian Inspirational and Uplifting Film is opening at the Cinemas! – Everyone who attends receives a Free Gift.

We have been fortunate enough to gain cinema exhibition with Palace Cinemas in Australia, the third largest in the country, for our film ‘Being in Heaven'. It opens in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne on the 28 th of January – eight days time!

Is it possible that you could advise as many people as you can that the film is on, by forwarding this email to them, as well as perhaps attend yourself with 300 of your closest friends!!

In order for it to gain a long run, and so make it a success, we need to fill the cinemas for the first few days, and Palace then book it for the following weeks.

There are sessions at either 1.00 pm or 6.30 pm, every day. You can see the trailer and synopsis of the story on www.beinginheaven.com.au

The film had an excellent response at the test launch in Byron Bay, where 93% found it from good to excellent.

Thanks so much for your help, it truly is much appreciated.

12 January 2010

Simon's reflection

Today’s Reflection is about an irony of life. At least, one of them.

I love what I do. It is both personal and professionally speaking, though right now the focus is more on the latter. Currently, there are four different graduate-level courses on a variety of topics happening in parallel, and various other individual and organizational clients. And a few projects of my own. And then that “PhD thing” lurking somewhere, feeling slightly neglected. The topics are ones that I absolutely love and am passionate about, from coaching to leadership to personal development to entrepreneurship. In the courses, I love the students probably even more than the topics themselves. They are engaged, passionate about the learning and ways to make a difference in the larger picture, intelligent and creative, and also bring a healthy dose of challenge into our learning environments, just to make sure we (the faculty) don’t become too complacent. An ideal combination really.

:: “The Gods have two ways of dealing harshly with us. The first is to deny
:: us our dreams, and the second is to grant them.” - Oscar Wilde

And then, just as I am about to finish teaching one of the courses (only 24 more final papers to read and grade) and savour a bit of a quiet time, two more emails and two more teaching opportunities of the same topics that I love, with both the same and different universities. Great. Awesome. Cool. They keep knocking on the door. Wait. What about my other plans? I was thinking of taking a time out and breath. Damn. Now what do I do?

:: “I beg you... to have patience with everything unresolved in your heart
:: and try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked rooms or
:: books written in a very foreign language. Don't search for the answers,
:: which could not be given to you now because you would not be able to live
:: them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now.
:: Perhaps then someday far in the future you will gradually, without even
:: noticing it, live your way into the answer.” - Rainer Maria Rilke

The strong need and desire to know the answer, right now, is one that is all too common to many. Being in the unknown, in the mystery, in the place were we have no comfort of knowing past, present, and future - is not a place people are often looking forward to. We want to know, to be certain, to avoid that state of discomfort of not knowing, of not being seen as the expert, the one “who has it all together,” the one in control, the one comfortably in control. Here, having the right answer, right now, is everything.

Yet, life teaches us that there are no such places. At least, not for any substantial periods of time. A brief and fleeting moment, of seeming certainty, here and there, merely to tease and lure us into complacency. We relax, drop our defenses, stretch and breath deep. In that very moment, something changes, and we are thrown back into the mystery of the unknown.

Can there be too much of a good thing? Can it cause overwhelm? And if so, are we allowed – spiritually, karmically, metaphysically – to say NO to the Universe, when it (not an adequate descriptor, I know) keeps sending our way more and more of what we want? I mean, what if I say NO and the Universe will reply with, “OK, I guess you don’t want it any more, and so I am done with you. Black-booked for the next few reincarnations.” A scary thought.

:: “We do not have enough peace. Yet peace will never be attained by
:: perpetual action. Stirred water never has the chance to settle
:: clear. A tree buffeted by winds can never grow straight.”
:: - Deng Ming-Dao


And, by the way, in case you are still wondering - I said yes and I said no.

A sunny week to you all, inside and out.


:: Simon’s Reflections newsletter is published on a
:: bi-weekly basis and contains writings that touch
:: the heart, provoke the mind, and inspire action.
:: Your thoughts and comments are always welcome.


Simon

About: http://www.SimonGoland.com
Blog: http://www.SimonGoland.com/news
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