Showing posts with label fairytales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fairytales. Show all posts

Saturday, October 9, 2010

TODAY - SPIRIT & KNOWLEDGE FAIR - 2010

The Spirit and Knowledge Fair is today!
I posted about it earlier this month.
Click here for the Introduction to the Fair.

I did few add-on lectures so here is what I will be doing all day!
  • Opening Concert: Four Winds
  • Kalevala Goes Black and White; Costumes and Clothest Kalevala Style
  • Under the Northern Star - Thoughts on the Mindset of Scandinavia - Juha Pentikäinen
  • Ancient Germanic-Scandinavian Egregori; Odin and Hyperborea
  • Kalevala; Guide to the Stars
  • Who am I, where do I come from and where am I going? (Where is humankinds origins, and how knowing our past can help us evolve spiritually in the future / What is Aquarian Age and how will it effect me?)
  • New possibilities of Intuition (Our spiritual gifts and intuition are experincing a change as we are being now more supported than before)
  • Sampo and it's Invisible School


Sounds good right! Even my hubby who is non-newage was interested in the line up, too bad it is all in finnish, I would have taken him with me if it had something in english as well.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

SPIRIT AND KNOWLEDGE FAIR 9.10 - 10.10.2010

Spirit and Knowledge Fair (Hengen ja Tiedon Messut) has been 28 year tradition of Rajatieto Magazine. And this year themed "Northern Folklore and Spirituality", and with my post lately you can probably guess wither or not I am going. ;)

Sat. 9.10.2010 10-19 (12€)
Sun 10.10.2010 (High Energy Day) 10-18 (12€)

Hengen ja Tiedon messut briefly in English

The Exhibition "Spirit and Knowledge" is a spiritual event organized every autumn in Helsinki.

With over 200 exhibitors the event presents a good cross-cut of the field of new age spirituality: modern spiritual teachings, perennial wisdom of east and west, alternative medicine and health care, yoga and meditation, parapsychology, healthy and biological food and other ecological products, astrology, literature, CDs and spiritual works of art.

The 28th Exhibition will take place on October 9th-10th 2010. The event is organized by Rajatiedon Yhteistyö ry, a cooperative of Finnish spiritual associations, groups, companies and individuals. This year´s theme is Northern Folklore and Spirituality and it will be the basis for a rich program of lectures and seminars.
I've already picked out the lectures I am going to:
  • Opening Concert: Four Winds
  • Kalevala Goes Black and White; Costumes and Clothest Kalevala Style
  • Under the Northern Star - Thoughts on the Mindset (Kalevala or Bear-god) - Juha Pentikäinen
  • Ancient Germanic-Scandinavian Egregori; Odin and Hyperborea
  • Kalevala; Guide to the Stars

That is Saturday - I usually just take one day out of two.

Hope to see you there!

Saturday, February 6, 2010

FREE DOWNLOADABLE E-BOOKS & THEY'RE LEGAL

If you haven't yet ran into the Project Gutenberg site you haven't looked hard enough.
Here are some books that are readable online, as well as downloadable to your own computer.

Why are they free? The books are free in the United States because their copyright has expired on them. What do them mean by free? Click here.

Now spiritually usefull list begins Here:

Myths of the Norsemen by H. A. Guerber
( Hélène Adeline 1859-1929 )
The religious beliefs of the North are not mirrored with any exactitude in the Elder Edda. Indeed only a travesty of the faith of our ancestors has been preserved in Norse literature. The early poet loved allegory, and his imagination rioted among the conceptions of his fertile muse. "His eye was fixed on the mountains till the snowy peaks assumed human features and the giant of the rock or the ice descended with heavy tread; or he would gaze at the splendour of the spring, or of the summer fields, till Freya with the gleaming necklace stepped forth, or Sif with the flowing locks of gold."
Legends of the Middle Ages by H. A. Guerber
The object of this work is to familiarize young students with the legends which form the staple of mediaeval literature. While they may owe more than is apparent at first sight to the classical writings of the palmy days of Greece and Rome, these legends are very characteristic of the people who told them, and they are the best exponents of the customs, manners, and beliefs of the time to which they belong. These mediaeval legends form a sort of literary quarry, from which, consciously or unconsciously, each writer takes some stones wherewith to build his own edifice. Many allusions in the literature of our own day lose much of their force simply because these legends are not available to the general reader.
The Story of the Greeks by H. A. Guerber
A knowledge of ancient history, however superficial, is of very great value; and the classic legends are almost equally worth knowing, because of the prominent part they play in the world's literature. These tales make a deep impression on the minds of children, and the history thus
learned almost in play will cling to the memory far more tenaciously than any lessons subsequently conned.
Stories of the Wagner Opera by H. A. Guerber (don't know who Wagner is? Click Wikipedia)
"We swear to thee that great and free
Our Rome shall be as once of yore;
To protect it from tyranny
We'll shed the last drop of our gore.
Shame and destruction now we vow
To all the enemies of Rome;
A new free people are we now,
And we'll defend our hearth and home."
Contes et Légendes (Legends and Fairy Tales) by H. A. Guerber (they also have the french original)
This little collection of Legends and Fairy Tales is intended merely as an introduction to general French reading. The stories have been told as simply as possible, with infinite repetition of the same words and idioms to enable the pupil to obtain a good vocabulary almost unconsciously. They have also been narrated as graphically as practicable to arouse an interest in the plot, to stimulate curiosity, and thereby induce the pupil to read to the end.
With the exception of the first tale of the series, for which I have purposely selected the common nursery story, "The Three Bears," I have carefully avoided the tales which are most familiar, or have given them in some unusual version, so that only by knowing the meaning of the words the sense of the story can be obtained.
The Book of the Epic by H. A. Guerber
Every now and then in our reading we come suddenly face to face with first things,--the very elemental sources beyond which no man may go. There is a distinct satisfaction in dealing with such beginnings, and, when they are those of literature, the sense of freshness is nothing short of inspiring. To share the same lofty outlook, to breathe the same high air with those who first sensed a whole era of creative thoughts, is the next thing to being the gods' chosen medium for those primal expressions.
These are the first 6 - I'll be updating this list during the day. H. A. Gueber's writing is magnetic, you'll see when you start reading the prefaces, she's very good at it.

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