Skip to main content

Access the Wisdom of Your Spiritual Heart





Access the Wisdom of Your Spiritual Heart
"David McArthur's beautiful book shares his discovery of the spiritual heart and the heart's innate intelligence.  From his own experiences, David shows you how to access your heart's wisdom, whatever your challenges may be."  ~– Deborah Rozman, CEO HeartMath Inc.
In your hands is the access code to the highest levels of wisdom within you. That wisdom is deeply practical and makes a difference in your life in minutes. Your Spiritual Heart contains a powerful technique to access that wisdom based on the world-renowned Institute of HeartMath's scientific breakthroughs.

If you are frustrated because you can't get the right job, your career is stalled, or you haven't broken out of financial struggle,your spiritual heart has the wisdom to help you find and fulfill those heart's desires. If the loving relationship your heart desires has not come into your life, or the relationships you have are strained and becoming hurtful or unfulfilling, your spiritual heart's wisdom will guide you to the fulfillment of your heart's deepest desires. 

Your Spiritual Heart contains the stories, the science and the technique to access to the amazing wisdom of your spiritual self. Your spiritual heart has the power to end your stress in a moment plus the insights to meet and exceed any challenge before you. Spiritual understanding and enlightenment are gifts of your spiritual heart. This book is an invitation to live at a whole new level of resilience and fulfillment. You can experience what it is like to step into humankind s greatest potential heart-centered living.  


PO Box 1223, Conifer, CO 80433

Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ampersands: Pretty Is as Pretty Does

   By Carolyn Howard-Johnson Author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally Series of books for writers   Have you noticed how ampersands turn to gibberish when they are entered into some blog services like Google's blogpsot.com? That is only the beginning of problems ampersands cause for editors, and publishers of all kinds. Many of the difficulties they cause go unnoticed except by the publishing pros we would all like to impress like agents, librarians, bookstore event directors, and the acquisition editors at Knopf!    That's why I added a new section to the second edition of the winningest book in my #HowToDoItFrugally Series of books for writers,  The Frugal Editor . Because ampersands seem to be so popular these days, it's especially important for editors and authors who publish books to know a little about their history, how to use them, and how gatekeepers and readers of Lynn Truss's famous zero-tolerance a

On Writing Chase Scenes

By Carolyn Howard-Johnson Author of  The Frugal Editor,  the winning-est  in her award-winning HowToDoItFrugally Series of books for writers This article is excerpted from some editing I did for a writer of experimental fiction when I was on a Greater Los Angeles Writers Society panel writer of any genre can apply these suggestions to the chase, getaway, or high action scene in your script or manuscript before you send it to an agent or publisher or, better still, while you are writing the first draft.  Sometimes even the most fascinating, interesting and irresistible  detail can slow down the forward movement of your story. So as much as writers are told that detail is important, purge as much as you can from your action scenes and put it somewhere else or dribble it into narrative in other places in your manuscript. In the process, ask yourself if your reader really needs to know the color of the protagonist’s eyes. As important as detail is, some is better left to t

MARGARET FIELAND INTERVIEW (guest blogger)

When did you first know you were destined to be a writer? LOL, I never realized I was destined to be a writer -- I fell into it. I'd written poetry for years, collecting it in notebooks stacked in my attic when I wrote one I wanted to keep. This led me to several online sites and ultimately to discovering the Muse Online Writers Conference where I hooked up with Linda Barnett Johnson and joined her writers forums. She required everyone to write both fiction and poetry, so, with much trepidation, I started writing fiction. Then I got hooked on it, wrote a chapter book, took the ICL course and actually learned how to write it. Then in 2010, I was seized by a desire to write a sci fi novel, so I spent six weeks or so on world building, mostly, with a bit of plotting thrown in for good measure. Who would you cite as your influences? I'm a way-back sci-fi fan, and Robert A. Heinlein influenced me heavily. I took a lot away from his writing, notably the value of surpris