|
|
Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Feb 3, 2007, 7:42 AM: |
|||||
|
Robert Augustus Masters is an integral therapist and spiritual teacher living and working near Vancouver, British Columbia. His work emphasizes embodiment, authenticity and deep shadow work – with a connection to Being and the process of Awakening to (and as) What-Really-Matters forming an important foundation of his work. I first heard about his work through Jana on the Integral Naked website, then read his book Darkness Shining Wild - which totally blew me away and I thought, “I've got to meet this guy!” In Robert I feel I've found my first true teacher/mentor, and I've introduced a number of other people to his work, all of whom reported themselves very impressed, and several of whom have gone on to do more work with him.
When I was a moderator on Integral Naked I was delighted to be able to arrange for him to do a dialog with Stuart Davis – the dialog gives a good overview of his approach to therapy and I highly recommend it – and I also moderated a Question and Answer thread with him in that forum for several months. When I hosted an Integral Gathering in Vancouver in June 2006, a workshop with Robert was a central (dare I say integral) component of the weeklong gathering, and several of us did additional individual and couple sessions with him before and after the workshop – thus helping to transform the entire week into one big workshop.
I'll quote some material from his excellent website to give you a better idea of what he's all about. I highly recommend his books, although the essays and other material on his website - including a blog he recently started, and a free monthly newsletter - form an excellant introduction to his work.
From Robert's website:
My passion is to fuel, illuminate, and support the living of a deeper life, a life of love, integrity, and full-blooded awakening. Providing environments (both inner and outer) in which deep healing and transformation can take place is my vocation and privilege. Since 1977 I’ve worked as a psychotherapist (I have a Ph.D. in Psychology), group leader, bodyworker, and teacher of spiritual deepening practices, creatively integrating the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual in my practice. Evolving in fitting parallel with this has been my writing. I’ve authored seven books, and have several more closing in on publication. My essays have appeared in magazines ranging from Magical Blend to the Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, as well as in several anthologies. My poetry runs rampant through all my writing, keeping my prose on its toes.
~~~~~~~~~~~~ Here is a link to the Integral Naked dialog: Radical Intimacy and the Search for a More Integral Wholeness
|
||||||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Feb 22, 2007, 3:39 PM: |
||
|
A comment from Robert on shadow work in the context of spiritual teachers, part of Q&A Part 21: |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Mar 7, 2007, 8:46 PM: |
||||
|
From Robert's website, here is an essay by Robert on faith:
Faith is radical trust in action. Trust in what? In Being, in our own Buddha-Nature, in What-Really-Matters. We may not see It, we may not hear It, we may stray far from It, but through faith we open to the recognition that It – however invisible It may seem to be to us – is ever with us, regardless of our thoughts to the contrary. Faith is intimacy with not-knowing.
Faith is forged in the crucible of our suffering, emerging as a dynamic openness that helps us navigate those zones of ourselves commonly submerged in darkness, despair, and depression. The presence of faith, however, doesn’t necessarily mean we will have clear sailing or an easy time. Even when our faith is strong, we may still find ourselves down in the mud on our hands and knees, but not so inclined to make ego-suffused drama out of our situation. Faith responds to problems, but not on the level at which they occur. That is, faith assumes a nonproblematic orientation to problems, providing a spiritually intimate openness that holds us and our areas of concern with great care. This openness – a sacred enfolding – contains without binding, and releases without abandoning. Its value is verified by direct participation in it. Direct experience, not belief, provides the relevant data or material – physical and otherwise – through which faith is cultivated, known, appreciated, and more deeply known. Faith is not a kind of belief or cognitive exercise; it is much deeper than any mental construction. And nor is faith merely a type of hope – hope is rooted in the future, faith in the present. Where hope promises, faith gives. Where hope dreams, faith awakens. Where hope is nostalgia for the future, faith is acceptance of the now. And this is not a blind, defeatist, narrow, misguided, or submissive acceptance, but it is an acceptance nevertheless – and a largely unresisting acceptance – unpolluted by hope and other romancings of tomorrow. Faith deepens through situations that test it. Without such conditions, faith remains in the shallows. Pain comes with Life; what better use to make of pain than to deepen our faith? Instead of turning our pain into suffering – that is, dramatizing it, with us playing victim or pawn to it – we can use its energies to fuel our way into a deeper life, a life abundant with faith. Then suffering is not so much a fall from Grace as it is Grace in its dark, deglamorized disguise, providing the very conditions through which we can more fully awaken from the entrapping dreams we habitually populate. There is perhaps no more worthy gift to have than unshakable faith. What does such faith mean? First, a strongly felt connection to Being, in conjunction with the recognition that that connection still exists at those times when we don’t feel it. Second, a non-despairing abandoning of all hope of fruition, an unforced letting go of being invested and caught up in particular outcomes. Third, a developing of the kind of patience that waits without waiting, that endures without having to have a clear endpoint. Fourth, a dynamic embracing of not-knowing, honoring the knowledge-transcending Mystery of Being. Fifth, accepting what is exactly as it is, including one’s feelings and intentions and actions regarding it. And, last but not least, cultivating gratitude for what one currently has, including the ability to develop faith. If our faith is well-rooted, we usually do not forget it for long – we cannot help but remember what gives us faith, even when our remembering is gray, thick, or far from stable. Faith is not an antidote to our suffering, but rather a compassionate space for it, wherein we can more clearly hear and sanely respond to what our pain is saying to us. Although faith may not make pain go away, it changes our relationship to it in such a way that we’re less likely to turn our pain into suffering. So faith does not necessarily still the storm, but allows us to be with it – and to become intimate with it – without losing track of What-Really-Matters. Spiritual stamina. Faith teaches us not to control, but to let be. This is not mere passivity nor some sort of spiritualized irresponsibility, but rather a kind of potent quietness or stillness out of which can emerge fitting action, choices made by something wiser than our minds. When our faith is strong, the necessity of the situation is the only catalyst we need. Faith is frequently made synonymous with what is commonly referred to as “blind faith.” But real faith is far from blind; though it may sometimes lack clear vision, it knows the way by heart, even if it has to inch along on its belly through the sniper fire of doubt. Faith allows us to live sanely and compassionately in the midst of all that is happening. Bad days don’t destroy or cripple it. In fact, bad days actually strengthen it. So for faith, suffering is not just bad news. However, the presence of faith does not mean an end to difficult states – as in some fantasy of saintly detachment – but rather an appropriate context for them. Bringing things to an end is not the point – radical trust in Being is. Faith is the unresisting embodiment of such trust. Faith is the highest form of devotion. Faith is the heartland of sacred patience, explaining nothing and revealing much. Through it, we find the necessary energy and endurance for the most significant journey of all. Faith knows the way by heart. |
|||||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Mar 12, 2007, 11:51 AM: |
||
|
see also Robert's blog on The Deepening of Trust. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Mar 24, 2007, 3:27 PM: |
||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersmaxie said Mar 24, 2007, 3:39 PM: |
||
|
Arthur, |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Mar 24, 2007, 5:21 PM: |
||
|
Michael: Arthur, |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Mar 25, 2007, 8:14 PM: |
||
|
see also: An Expose of Flirting. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersColin said Mar 31, 2007, 10:13 PM: |
||
|
“What does such faith mean? First, a strongly felt connection to Being, in conjunction with the recognition that that connection still exists at those times when we don't feel it. Second, a non-despairing abandoning of all hope of fruition, an unforced letting go of being invested and caught up in particular outcomes. Third, a developing of the kind of patience that waits without waiting, that endures without having to have a clear endpoint. Fourth, a dynamic embracing of not-knowing, honoring the knowledge-transcending Mystery of Being. Fifth, accepting what is exactly as it is, including one's feelings and intentions and actions regarding it. And, last but not least, cultivating gratitude for what one currently has, including the ability to develop faith.” |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersgitanjali said Apr 1, 2007, 1:11 AM: |
||
|
Thanks Colin for highlighting this paragraph. To me its a very soulful sense of faith, and here in this rather dry city of straight lines, I am in need of the soulful! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersBlue said Apr 1, 2007, 12:06 PM: |
||
|
Wow, that's stunning. It reminds me a lot of Adyashanti's description of trust in an autobiographical talk he gave, which I think adastra posted somewhere around here. Even just reading this has stirred my heart more than a bit. Thanks for sharing this. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 10, 2007, 8:02 AM: |
|||||
|
In another thread, Blue commented: “adastra, thank you very much for the pithy RAM comments on death. The writings you've posted by him are kind of like an ideal multivitamin–highly condensed and loaded with easily digestible spiritual nutrition.”
|
||||||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 10, 2007, 8:08 AM: |
||
|
see also Taking Charge of Our Charge. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 10, 2007, 6:59 PM: |
||
|
Here's an amusing essay by Robert from his excellent book Divine Dynamite, an expanded edition of which was published recently. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersLiz said Apr 10, 2007, 7:14 PM: |
||
|
Still my favorite “essay” by the other BBG. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersColin said Apr 12, 2007, 2:51 PM: |
||
|
That's GREAT! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 13, 2007, 11:23 AM: |
||
|
When Spiritual Life Really Begins - Robert Augustus Masters |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 14, 2007, 8:50 PM: |
||
|
Lately I've started adding quotes to the Robert Augustus Masters section of the awesome zaadz quote repository; I invite other followers of his work to do the same if you like. :) |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 15, 2007, 10:54 AM: |
|||
|
Another essay by Robert from his blog:
|
||||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersPelle said Apr 15, 2007, 11:55 AM: |
||
|
I enjoyed those quotes, thanks Arthur. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Apr 30, 2007, 4:22 PM: |
||
|
see also RAM on Rap |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said May 7, 2007, 6:09 PM: |
||
|
see also We Are Never Not In Relationship |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said May 19, 2007, 10:21 AM: |
||
|
Robert Augustus Masters on Meditation: |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said May 24, 2007, 3:26 PM: |
||
|
see also When Familiarity Vanishes |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 6, 2007, 11:57 AM: |
||
|
I particularly like Robert's latest blog, which I posted elsewhere on the pod: |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 11, 2007, 6:33 PM: |
||
|
I just posted a riveting article by Robert called Into the Heart of Fear - it includes a description of work with a client in a group setting, which gave me chills and brought back workshop memories. I highly recommend working with this guy if you get (or make) a chance. :) |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 17, 2007, 8:07 PM: |
||
|
ANNOUNCEMENT: Robert Augustus Masters Boulder Workshop! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 27, 2007, 10:32 PM: |
||
|
see also Distinguishing Sanity From Insanity |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 5, 2007, 11:51 AM: |
||
|
ANNOUNCEMENT: Integral Gathering + RAM Workshop 2008 - Plan Now! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 5, 2007, 11:53 AM: |
||
|
Here is an essay from Robert's Groupwork page:
After a greeting from me, participants (sitting in a circle on the floor) take turns introducing themselves, saying, among other things, a bit about what they’re having trouble dealing with and what they’re hoping to get from being in the group. Inevitably, several get quite emotional doing so. When everyone has had their turn, I begin working with one person (who usually steps forward with little or no invitation from me). For anywhere from one to three or so minutes, I gather relevant information from that one, zeroing in on what’s troubling or challenging him or her, and then begin deepening the work, through whatever fits at the moment, be it Gestalt, psychodrama, conscious movement, guided meditation, or, more often than not, bodywork combined with psychotherapeutic direction. This usually brings about considerable energetic and emotional release, along with fitting insights. The work may finish with the person, considerably more open, returning to their place in the circle, or perhaps facing the group and deepening their contact with everyone, or mining their work for further insights into their life. I may then discuss what’s just happened, emphasizing that each person’s work is, in a very real sense, everyone’s work, encouraging everyone to let themselves fully feel each person’s work, and to suppress what they're feeling while another is working. Often the next person who comes forward to work has been deeply stirred by the first person’s work and opening. By the time I’ve worked with the second participant, the whole group has come together, providing an ever-deepening environment for deep healing and awakening. When a piece of work is particularly moving, obviously affecting most in the group, I’ll sometimes have them gather around the person who’s just worked (who may be lying down on a mat), close their eyes, and stay there for a while, during which time I may play some fitting music, or Diane (my wife) may sing. After that’s done, I may work with a third participant, or maybe with two participants (perhaps a couple, or two others with a similar issue), or have some group discussion. Things are wide open now. The group has become a sanctuary for very deep work, without trying to be so. There’s plenty of rage, tears, passion, and laughter. There’s tacit permission for everyone to be in as much pain as they actually are. I’m often amazed at this point to look at the clock and see that only an hour has gone by. More work follows: Someone exposes and works with a difficult relationship they’ve had or are in, and as they do so, others who’ve been in or are in a similar bind gain insight and inspiration for working with that bind; someone else works with a feeling of isolation they keep having, exploring its roots and cutting through their isolation, and as they do so, everyone else feels more connected; someone else who feels powerless does deep work regarding this, eventually contacting a place of such power in themselves that everyone cannot help but celebrate with them; and so on. In such groupwork, one person’s work can catalyze others’ work to a depth very difficult to otherwise access. The sharing of such work, level upon level, in an environment of intimate safety and trust is as liberating as it is practical, as heart-opening as it is empowering, as integration-promoting as it is clarifying. Initially, the opportunity to self-disclose is sometimes shyly or reluctantly approached, but after a short while, opening thus becomes not a burden, but an ease, a liberating exposure; opening up thus does not necessarily mean having no boundaries, but in fact often is about opening to the need for clearer, stronger boundaries. When we can be open about being closed, compassionately present with our resistance to our work, we are not so far from being what we are seeking; when one person in a group does this, all usually feel a deepening inner permission to do the same, shedding “shoulds” and tuning in to what really matters. This is not to uncritically praise groupwork (for it has its own pathological possibilities, such as the overriding of individual needs by group needs), but to highlight the very real benefits that it can abundantly supply. I encourage everyone to share their intuitions at various points during a participant’s work. Toward the end of the morning session, I usually have participants sit in pairs, and lead them through improvised dyadic exercises (like completing incomplete sentences while maintaining eye contact with each other). We almost always finish with a group circle, during which I’ll teach a little meditation, and then have everyone let their voices flow out as I put something suitable on the stereo. Ten or so minutes later, and the morning session is over… - Robert Augustus Masters |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 5, 2007, 10:00 PM: |
||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 15, 2007, 11:44 AM: |
||
|
Also of interest is the Diane Bardwell thread, which has links to some of her beautiful songs based on Robert's poetry. I've been waiting for this CD to come out for a long time, and it's finally here - whoo-hoo! :) |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersLucidity said Aug 15, 2007, 10:56 PM: |
||
|
Arthur, |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 23, 2007, 1:38 PM: |
||
|
lucidity: I'm completely blow away by his writings. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersJayne said Aug 25, 2007, 5:42 PM: |
||
|
Thanks Arthur for this information on Robert Masters. As I'm new to the pod, I've been catching up on some of the threads. This week I've been contemplating compassion and came across one of his articles on Idiot Compassion - very, very good and it just opened the gate of understanding for me. The piece I was missing. I've been writing and contemplating deeper ALL day almost (needed a relaxed day today) on thoughts/ideas that were spurred on by his article. One of my blog posts this week will be devoted to compassion/idiot compassion as relates to the path of sacred service. Again, thanks for the great resource! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 25, 2007, 9:14 PM: |
||
|
Hi Jayne |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersJayne said Aug 28, 2007, 12:08 PM: |
||
|
Hello All - If you're interested, I posted an article on my blog site - Communion & Community - about Idiot Compassion - referencing and linking to an article by Robert Masters. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Oct 28, 2007, 9:36 PM: |
||
|
see also “What Is Integral?” - blog by Robert Augustus Masters |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Dec 14, 2007, 9:09 AM: |
||
|
Robert is on a live internet radio program RIGHT NOW talking about mature monogamy; go to this link: |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Dec 14, 2007, 10:25 AM: |
||
|
I noticed recently that Robert has some great new blog topics, but haven't had a chance to read them yet. Looking forward to his take on the following topics! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersLauren said Dec 15, 2007, 7:46 AM: |
||
|
Arthur, |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Dec 14, 2007, 11:50 AM: |
|||||||||||
|
~~~ (Or just use the “Open Podcast” link above to download it.) It was a great show and I'm looking forward to listening to it again. :) spiral out, arthur |
||||||||||||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersdjnutz said Dec 17, 2007, 6:36 AM: |
||
|
Arthur! Thanks for bringing this GUY up!!!! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Dec 17, 2007, 6:05 PM: |
||
|
Hey, hey DJ I'm delighted to report that this Friday, Dec. 21st at 9:00am PST, Robert~~~ spiral out, arthur |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Dec 27, 2007, 7:36 AM: |
||
|
There will be a Robert Masters Workshop in Boston, March 1-2, 2008 |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jan 4, 2008, 4:08 PM: |
||
|
FORGIVENESS: SACRED CLOSURE Forgiveness is the greatest weapon. — Neem Karoli Baba
Forgiveness is the heart’s pardon. Sacred closure. To forgive doesn’t mean to excuse or condone, but rather to cease dehumanizing and excluding from our heart our offending other or others. When we forgive, we neither bypass nor gloss over injury, but instead embrace and embody a perspective in which injury is not given the power to obscure or diminish our compassion. Although forgiveness might seem to some to be an act of acquiescence or weakness, it is actually an act of great power, for it not only retrieves us from the past, where we’re emotionally bound to those whom we won’t forgive, but also from the future — where we’re similarly bound — thereby bringing us present, undividedly and wholeheartedly present. Forgiveness is a radical act of love not only for the offending other, but also for oneself. In forgiving someone, we are, in so many words, telling that person, “I no longer am interested or invested in having anything damaging happen to you. No longer am I going to turn the hurt you have done me into an excuse to dehumanize or violate you. Although I may never again have or make contact with you, no longer will I keep you out of my heart, however difficult that might be.” Thus do we disconnect in order to connect at a deeper level. We then stop feeding our resentment, realizing as we do so that it was actually feeding on us, consuming our energy and attention. Our appetite for vengeance naturally shrinks, like any other shadow, in the light of our forgiveness. Then the courtrooms of our mind are not so readily populated by us — wanting to be right no longer so easily recruits and centers us. We may still get angry, but will be far less likely to infuse it with ill-will or hatred, or let it transmute into aggression. Caring for the other becomes more important than getting even, regardless of the consequences that may be deemed fitting for whatever harm may have been done. “Love your enemies.” This may be the most practical (and marginalized) of all of the teachings of Jesus. Rooted as it is in our capacity to forgive, it cuts through the rigidly dualistic “I” versus “you” or “us” versus “them” mentality that so easily infects and aberrates us. Loving — not necessarily liking, but loving — our enemies is a kind of radical sanity, for in loving them, in wholeheartedly wishing for their freedom from delusion, we are not only ceasing to demonize them, but are also aligning ourselves with their healing. Their healing — our healing. If our enemies were to find and embody their innate happiness, if they were freed from their suffering, if they were to heal, then they would no longer be motivated or driven to harm us. Is there a more potent and user-friendly catalyst for disarmament than forgiveness?
Implicit in the practice of forgiveness is the willingness to place ourselves — and not just intellectually! — in our offending others’ shoes and skin, to the point where they are no longer “other,” but rather only us in our less appealing facets. Forgiveness does not depend upon what the offending other does. That is, we don’t have to wait for that person to make amends. (And, at the same time, it is essential to realize that we do not have to forgive until we are truly ready to do so — to forgive prematurely is of no more use than putting off the forgiveness of which we are capable.) Sometimes we may be so righteously caught up in waiting for and expecting our offending others to make amends or to say that they’re sorry, that we don’t notice we are being held hostage by our expectations of them. If I refuse to forgive you until you “deserve” it, then I am simply punishing you, keeping myself negatively bound to you, or to the storyline with which I associate you. If I won’t forgive you until you have “earned” it, then I am keeping myself, however subtly, a victim of what you’ve done to me. And, if I am getting something out of staying in my “wounded” role — such as having a “valid” reason for not taking more responsibility for where I’m at in my life — I am likely going to continue to postpone forgiving you.
In the process of forgiving, we may have to, at least some of the time, reframe the harm-doing we have suffered. Perhaps the pain inflicted on us by our offending others has actually been of genuine benefit to us; perhaps we needed to be hurt, disappointed, betrayed, or left; perhaps we needed to learn something that could not be learned without being treated as we were treated by our offending others. This, of course, does not mean that their actions should therefore be condoned or praised, but that they be viewed from a perspective that’s not rooted in an eye-for-an-eye morality. Then we can clearly recognize such harm-doing as part of us. What I condemn in you also exists in me (and in everyone else), and there’s no way that it’s going to be healed if I persist in treating it as something alien to me. None of this is to say that forgiveness is an easy practice. For example, the path to forgiveness may initially be — and may need to be — paved with hatred. We may need to feel and fully express our hate for another before we can even approach forgiving that person (as is often the case with those who have been raped). This, however, doesn’t mean that we have to literally act out, or even share, such dark feeling with our offending other or others. If we can give our hate sufficiently free rein and voice, and just the space to be, in a safe environment — like that of good psychotherapy — we’re not only going to feel, through our rage-releasing, a much needed sense of empowerment, but we’re also bound to get to what underlies our hate, so that we can fully feel our hurt and thereby move through it. And at the heart of that hurt is not more hurt, but a love that cannot help but forgive. This love is self-radiant, effortlessly ego-transcending, simultaneously innocent and wise. It forgives us our trespasses, our forgettings of the Sacred, our stupidities large and small, and it does so instantaneously. It does not make a problem out of our mistakes. When we allow ourselves to house — and ultimately to be — such love, we do not see errors, but only incarnation’s fleshdance in sacred transparency. Which is but the shortest of steps to remembering with our whole being What-Matters-Most. Sometimes the process of forgiveness may seem to break our heart, but it is only the armoring around our heart that breaks. Or melts. Forgiveness brings us in out of the cold, potently reminding us of who we really are. When we choose to forgive, we are entering the morality of the Divine. In choosing to forgive, we deepen our intimacy with the Beloved. Forgiveness is not only the essence of true kindness, but also an act of genuine power. May we all embody it. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersJuliee said Feb 25, 2008, 7:23 AM: |
||
|
Funny - I was just thinking about forgiveness. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersNicole said Feb 25, 2008, 8:19 AM: |
||
|
Juliee, that's so beautiful. Personally, I am going through a very intense time of healing and growth, so it really resonates. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 27, 2008, 2:46 PM: |
||
|
FYI, I just created a Robert Augustus Masters Facebook group. If you'd like to join, you can either search Facebook groups under his name, or PM me your email address and I'll send you an invitation. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus MastersBill said Jul 27, 2008, 9:53 PM: |
||
|
>>>> Robert will be periodically answering questions from the group. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 28, 2008, 9:54 AM: |
||
|
Bill: Cool. Now all we have to do is think up some killer questions. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersgitanjali said Jul 28, 2008, 5:35 PM: |
||
|
Oh no!!!! now I'm gonna gave to join facebook :( |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 28, 2008, 6:17 PM: |
||
|
gitanjali: Oh no!!!! now I'm gonna gave to join facebook :( |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersgitanjali said Jul 28, 2008, 11:17 PM: |
||
|
heehee I still call it zaadz (dont tell GD) |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Jul 31, 2008, 8:08 AM: |
||
|
Glad to hear of your FB-induced mood boost, Gitanjali. :) |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 3, 2008, 9:53 AM: |
||
|
Update: the “Ask Robert” thread is up, there are already over a hundred members, and the Discussion Board is getting lively. Wheeeeeeeeee! |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 3, 2008, 7:24 PM: |
||
|
Bill: I tried a question. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersgitanjali said Aug 3, 2008, 8:35 PM: |
||
|
yay! my question can go to…. |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Aug 5, 2008, 11:26 AM: |
||
|
Robert's answers to the questions for this week have been posted in the Facebook group; six great questions - including those by Bill and Gitanjali - along with six fascinating answers. :) |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Feb 16, 2008, 10:52 AM: |
||
|
see also Spiritual Bypassing |
|||
|
|
Re: Robert Augustus Mastersadastra said Feb 25, 2008, 6:33 AM: |
||

Help









