God's Day in Region 6, Minneapolis

by Jim Bard-Minneapolis, MN

Nearly 30 families, 10 from out of state, came to the Minneapolis center this year to participate in the God's Day festivities. Led by our Regional Director, Rev. Hun Suk Lee, we all had a joyful time.

We began with the midnight pledge and prayer service, after which Rev. Lee spoke to us about the meaning of God's Day and the theme of past yearly mottoes. The live fireworks from nearby downtown seemed fittingly to complement the spiritual fireworks in our center.

At 7am we again bowed and pledged-this time in white robes. Rev. Lee spoke to us about the meaning of this year's motto; awards were given to families showing exemplary service and dedication in 1994. Children bowed to their parents; group pictures were taken; and then we all greeted one another before sharing a wonderful breakfast.

At 9:30am we had a talent contest and anonymous gift exchange. Every individual or family introduced themselves, offered their greeting to the rest of us, and then gave some performance. There were cash prizes given to the seven top performances, highlighted by a guest performance by Neil Diamond on a Karaoke machine, and the singing Van Ikeno family from Milwaukee.

After lunch most of us took a quick trip to the Bahamas, or at least what seemed like the Bahamas. Our afternoon outing brought us to the tropical paradise of the Shoreview Community Center with its beautiful swimming and wading pools, waterslide and whirlpool, all in a warm 78- degree environment (which was about 70 degrees warmer than outside!) with lush greenery and a gurgling brook. What a way to start the new year! We all enjoyed the opportunity to chat and relax with one another; the children of every age had lots of fun in the pool and on the waterslide, and it is amazing how much closer we felt to one another after a healthy game of "rugby" water-basketball. After a few hours we returned to the center for a delicious dinner, a report from the Dec. 22 meeting with Father, more entertainment, a yute game, Monopoly, and more catching up for those who remained. All thanks to Heavenly Father for a joyful and united beginning to the new year- God's Day 1995!

For Fast-Acting Relief, Try Slowing Down

by Debby Gullery

Normal day, let me be aware of the treasure you are. Let me learn from you, love you, bless you before you depart. Let me not pass you by in quest of some rare and perfect tomorrow. Let me hold you while I may, for it may not always be so. One day I shall dig my nails into the earth, or bury my face in the pillow, or stretch myself taut, or raise my hands to the sky and want, more than all the world, your return.

Mary Jean Irion, Yes, World

I've always been moved by the written word, drawing lines around inspiring quotes, putting pieces of paper in library books so that I could copy the passages out later, which I seldom did.

Compiling Wisdom, Insight & Counsel, 365 Daily Meditations has enabled me to do just that - go back to all those books, poems and songs which touched my heart or stirred my soul, gleaning the best and putting them together. I know that they will give each reader some of what they gave me: an inner sanctuary and a vision of what's possible each day.

All of us are busy, and we wear many hats. I am a wife and mother of three children. I have a job that I love as New York area chairwoman of Women's Federation for World Peace. Involvement in my community, the children's schools, their playdates and activities, and my congregation, all add to the demands on whatever time I have.

I've realized that the true art of life lies in finding the balance between ordinary daily activities and the ideals which inspire me to do more and to do better. The title of this article - For fast-acting relief, try slowing down- is actually a wonderful quote by Lily Tomlin that I used in the book.

Recently a friend shared this story with me: Her husband works in an office which overlooks the Hudson River. One evening he was so moved by the beauty of the sunset that he called her at home, emphatic that she run out and see it. This mother of two toddlers was in the middle of post-dinner clean-up. She did go outside, and was impressed, but later told me that she couldn't really stop long enough to connect to the beauty and allow it to nourish and fill her. I truly felt her heart, having had similar experiences.

I've also been blessed with happier occasions. Recently I had scheduled a walk to the brook with my four-year old. It was a perfect autumn day. Toby and I played hide-and-seek, and later I sat by the brook and watched him chase the falling leaves. I was filled with the desire to just stop and be in the moment, to drink the perfect joy of it deep into my soul and I did!

Experiences like these help me to remember the value of nurturing the ability to be still and be filled, of finding a quiet moment every day. That, then, is the purpose of this book - to offer an inspiration or thought that can provide a focus, if only for a few moments, on what is truly important.

Camp Sunrise Needs Your Help

by Bruce Grodner-Harriman, NY

Camp Sunrise has the long-term potential to be of great importance to the educational and social life of our community in the years to come. Yet, in 1989, when we first located this property, it was in a terrible condition: some 23 truck loads of garbage had to be removed; all kitchen equipment and plumbing had to be installed and many, many repairs had to be made in order to even begin to use this facility.

Without the help of many volunteers getting the camp functional would have been an impossible task.

Over the last six years, we have hosted thousands of members, guests, and more recently, outside groups (i.e. churches, social organizations, martial arts schools). However, the greatest use has come from groups of our second generation, holding their summer workshops for the last five years.

Since 1990, the Camp has run solely on the fees and donations collected-these, however, always come up a bit short! Without going into details, the operation of the Camp has been difficult, largely due to a lack of financial as well as human resources committed to the operation. We have operated the Camp during the past years, in many ways, at a substandard level to the state park regulations because of the lack of resources.

We have now come to a point of impasse.

We are certain that you agree that the Camp has become an important facility for education and recreation for our second generation during summer programs and other various church activities. It also has become an effective vehicle through which to serve many outside groups. However, despite its value we are now forced to decide if we can keep the Camp in operation. Unless there is reasonable assurance that resources will be committed for the Camp's operation by the church community as a whole, we are not in a position to renew the lease agreement of the Camp. And we must make this critical decision within this month.

If this program is to continue, it needs your help. We are proposing a membership drive where you and your family can spend some quality time in a healthy environment away from the hustle and bustle of life's demands.

Plan A (Membership Fee: $125 )

1 Waiver of the $7 admission fee for day visits.

2 You and your family will have 2 days and 2 nights of free lodging

3 You will be given a 20% discount of any meals during these two days.

Plan B (Membership Fee: $250 )

1 Waiver of the $7 admission fee for day visits.

2 You will have 4 days and 4 nights of free lodging.

3 You will receive 20% off all meals for one year.

If you can purchase your membership before Feb. 7th 1995, we will deduct $25 from Plan A and $50 from Plan B.

If there is insufficient participation, we will be unable to reopen the Camp and your donation will be refunded.

Another Assault on Classical Darwinism

How The Leopard Changed Its Spots: The Evolution of Complexity by Brian Goodwin, Scribner's 1994, $23, pp. 252. ISBN: 0-02-544710-6

As we are all too well aware, there is a spiritual war raging all around us. One of the pitched battles in this warfare is the struggle over what we tell our kids when they eventually insist on knowing where they came from.

This book, How The Leopard Changed Its Spots, is but the latest in the ongoing assault on the citadel of Darwinism as the received view of the Origin of Species. Thanks to the attacks of such high-profile groups as Creationists, it is in the public consciousness that all is not decided and that "survival of the fittest" is under its own evolutionary pressures to survive.

No one in their right mind, of course doubts for a moment the proposition that-in the vast, intricate complexity of life-systems that do better at living do better. And the preeminent characteristic of life is reproduction, the creation of a lineage in time. Systems that do better at living will have more descendants in the long run than systems that do living less well.

The questionable idea is that "survival of the fittest" is sufficient to explain the complexity of living systems. Where does all that complexity doing the struggling come from?

The author begins by establishing his `gripe' with Darwinism. Modern biology, he makes a good case for in the opening chapters, places too much emphasis on the genetic material and too little on the organization of the cell that makes it all possible.

Preparing the way, he first critique's Darwinism not for its scientific inadequacies but for its cultural and philosophical baggage--even going so far at one point as the equate the "selfish gene" perspective of Richard Dawkins-in which the gene is everything and a human being is a gene's way of propagating itself-with the great themes of original sin and redemption straight out of Christianity.

"So we see that the Darwinism described by Dawkins " has its metaphorical roots in one of our deepest cultural myths, the story of the fall and redemption of humanity". The "point of this exercise," the author avers, "is not to conclude that there is something wrong with Darwin's theory because it is clearly linked to some very powerful cultural myths and metaphors," but "is simply to help us stand back, take stock, and contemplate alternative ways of describing biological reality".

This passage, by the way, is typical of the calm and measured voice in which the author speaks, a cadence which makes even the challenging passages a pleasure to read.

Spots on leopards.

The `spots on the leopard' in the title, it seems, are metaphors for the parts of Darwinism that put all the responsibility for organisms in the DNA and, as these spots are debunked, the leopard changes into a spotless one (a lion?) "The brilliant light that shines on the genes as the most distinctive spot on the Darwinian leopard begins to fade into the context of the whole organism, which now emerges more clearly as the living being" (p. 39).

The author, quite correctly to my mind, points out the fatal flaw in Biology and Evolution as currently accepted. "Unlike the other sciences, in which principles of organization allow one to understand the structure of the physical and chemical world in terms of regularities and general principals, the phenomena of biology are unintelligible in such terms, and survival is the only law. This is why natural selection has become so important in biology: it is the only `force' that is used to explain what has happened during evolution (p. 88)."

Clearly, the author has that survival, in and of itself, is insufficient to account for the complexity found in living systems.

Generic Forms

So, if survival is not the origin of complexity, what is. Well, as we shall see, he never really tells us. But, what the book really excels at is tying together complexity at one level to a similar complexity at a very different level; in the bringing together of a remarkable diversity of phenomena and highlighting the common principles that are at work.

The list starts with the mathematical structures such as the Golden Ratio -a mathematical ratio that the Greeks used in making beautiful buildings-which is found in growing plants and the similarity of the patterns formed to those in totally unrelated phenomena such as magnetized drops.

He starts with the zebra-pattern making forms of simple chemical reactions-the Beloussov-Zhabotinskyreaction if you must know- and the similar patterns produced by single cells in culture.

Next he looks at the genetic patterns and how the various specific forms of living systems are variations on the same generic form- "examples of homeotic transformations (homeo means "similar") because one organ is replaced by another structure that belongs to the same natural set of forms". He then develops the discussion to embrace gene activity in development using limb formation as an example and concluding with an overview of eye development.

In each case, the author points out the deep, underlying generic form that underlies all these systems. He calls these principles that pop up all over biology, and their expression in the origin of species, the Evolution of Generic Forms.

It is this expression of these principles tying together such diverse complexity that is missing from classical Darwinism. Why should natural selection like the Golden Ratio?

"This is a principle reason organisms cannot be reduced to their genes or their molecules. The particular type of organization that exists in the dynamic interplay of the molecular parts of an organism, which I have called a morphogenetic or a developmental field, is always engaged in making and remaking itself in life cycles and exploring its potential for generating new wholes ."

Morphogenetic field

But, for all this fascinating description of generic forms as expression of a morphogenetic principle or field, we are left hanging when we start wondering just what the morphogenetic field actually is.

The author early on introduces the concept that natural law as where we might locate the morphogenetic field. In talking about the fabled vortex of bathwater draining, he mentions that the "properties of fluids are described by particular equations"" and that "when these are solved for the particular conditions of water flow from a bath " out pop clockwise and counterclockwise spirals as stable solutions of motion".

This line of thought, unfortunately, is not developed as a major theme in the discussion, as the physics level is not fully explored. We do encounter the fundamental levels again when the insights of the new physics are introduced, But the author does not take a clear position as to what insights quantum mechanics has to offer in our search for the source of complexity. "Whichever of these views one adopts, or indeed any of the other contenders in the field, the undeniable consequence is that the old mechanical view of causation, of external forces acting on inert particles of matter, is dead. Physics recognizes that natural processes cannot be described in these terms, and that the phenomena we see in nature are expressions of a deeper reality".

Emergent Order

The question now is, of course, what does the author suggest to supplement natural selection as the force driving evolution.

"The main proposal is that all the main morphological features of organisms-hearts, brains, guts, limbs, eyes, leaves, flowers, roots, trunks, branches, to mention only the obvious ones-are the emergent results of morphogenetic principles."

And it is this emergent result that is the key element missing in Darwinism.

"The shift of focus in the new biology that is developing out of the sciences of complexity has its focus on the origins of emergent order in complex dynamic systems. ... The dramatic shift emphasis that accompanies this reorientation in biology merits a new name; a Science of Qualities" (p. 194).

Sex

How does evolution work in this Science of Qualities. We do, for all the earlier protestations, get back to genetics. Here we encounter the constant permutation of combinations that occurs in sex, how genes get mixed up during heredity-the creation of offspring and the driving force of evolution.

"This mixing of the gene pool results in an effective search through the potential space of morphogenetic trajectories, an exploration of the possible forms in some of which the living state can be expressed as robust and viable species in suitable habitats."

Now one of the great mysteries of evolution is its tempo-how long it takes to happen. Strangely enough, it seems that it took the primordial earth-and it was sterile since the planet went through a period of being totally molten-only the relatively brief period of 100 million years to go from the formation of the oceans to life of the level of bacteria. Less surprisingly, it took another 1,500 million years to get as complex as a yeast and another 1,000 million years to get up to the worm. But then it only took another 50 million years to establish all the basic levels of sophistication we see today in all plants and animals-the so-called Cambrian Explosion of life. The last 500 million years of evolution-including us-are all variations on the themes introduced in the Explosion.

Some attribute the Explosion to the discovery of sex. It is a mechanism, par excellence, for exploring all the possible permutations of inheritance relatively quickly; each new generation is a new experiment. And the results of the experiment are propagation of a lineage or extinction of the lineage.

Development

But we are not taken on an extensive overview of sex and its role in exploring the variations in the generic forms, rather the author proceeds to examine development and behavior.

Couched in the modern mathematics of chaos and catastrophe, he look at a variety of situations, such as the behavior patterns of ants and the role of play in human development. We explore the remarkable longevity qualities of the North Pakistan Hunza and a lengthy discussion of the Peckham Experiment on the role of social conditions on health. Then a discussion of the ecological versus the monoculture approach to agriculture (I skimmed all this , I must confess.)

These examples, among many others, are fascinating but they do not really throw a lot of light of the evolutionary process per se. While this last section of the book is interesting, it does not illuminate the concept of the morphogenetic field introduced in the initial discussion.

Unfortunately the path the author takes gets philosophical rather than taking a `hard science' route. This is a shame because the `deeper structure' that is a source of form, and hence complexity, is already well established in modern science.

Nature of Morphogenetic field

Because, we wonder (at least I did), just what are these morphogenetic principles. I mean, as far as objective reality is concerned-the reality that is established in the modern physics and chemistry we all seek to emulate.

Well, unfortunately, it all gets a little vague.

He makes it clear that these morphogenetic principles are not the same as the morphogenetic field of Sheldrake-the proposal of which "A New Science of Life" prompted the prestigious science journal Nature to call for a book burning.

Well, is the morphogenetic field like the Platonic Absolutes? If so, they are not the clear-cut forms of the regular polygons but rather they are fuzzy forms. This should have, at least, have led into a brief discussion of the new mathamatical discipline called fuzzy logic with its rejection of the black-and-white for the perhaps-and-maybe.

A discussion-perhaps introducing the new mathematics of fuzzy logic to highlight its broader scope than classical true-or-false logic-of this as the stuff of the morphogenetic field would have been intriguing but, unfortunately, this is not addressed.

The most effective way of making a case for a morphogenetic field would have been if the author had related it to something already accepted in physics and chemistry. And, although it is not addressed, physics and chemistry accept that the form-and complexity-of atoms is derived from a probability form.

This aspect of modern chemistry is derived directly quantum mechanics, the undisputed worldview that rules in modern physics. Its technical name is an "orbital" but most readers will probably feel more comfortable if we generalize it as a probability form.

In a common sense sort of way, modern science measures the external aspects of things-such as location in time and space, energy, speed etc. etc. Now most people, if they think of it at all, probably associate quantum mechanics with uncertainty-that on a microscopic level, there are no precise laws that determine what is going to happen. And this is not correct.

There are precise natural laws-accurately described in a small set of daunting equations-in modern physics but they only work if we allow that the external aspects are not sufficient to describe the state and behavior of something like an electron. There is another aspect which, for simplicity, we can call internal distinguishing it from the external ones.

The author does flirt with this modern concept of seeing the objective reality of systems as being described as the movement in an abstract phase space but he does not take the next step, as some have done-such has Oxford Professor Roger Penrose in his The Emperor's New Mind-and accept that this abstract aspect of systems is as real as the time- space-energy aspects that all scientists agree are "objectively real" (but please don't ask for definitions of the terms real, time, space, and energy in terms of more basic concepts because they will either change the subject or else start talking about superstrings).

It can only be put down to a conceptual preference for the external world of matter. While all modern physics is based on the quantum state as being the best description of the objective reality of electrons and atoms, very few accept this abstract aspect as being "real"-with Penrose and others being the exceptions.

In modern science, the external history of an electron is not deterministic, it has a "mind of its own" so to speak. The internal history, on the other hand, is fully and completely deterministic-the preciseness that is captured in the quantum-mechanical equations. The external history reflects this history in terms of probability-all anyone can know, and this includes God if the physicists are correct, is the probability of finding an electron in a particular state. It is from the internal aspect of the electron that the orbital of modern chemistry-the probability form of an atomic electron-is directly derived.

But, just as if you throw a coin often enough you will see the pattern of 50% heads, 50% tails emerging, so an electron will exhibit the form to its internal aspect if it does the same thing enough times. And an atomic electron orbits the proton billions of times a second. The abstract form to the orbital is expressed in this way over time.

So, to simplify matters, we can equate the morphogenetic field or principle of the author with the internal aspect inherent already in modern physics-the forms inherent to the internal, probability orbitals of the quantum physicists.

Here we again join the stream of the book. These probability forms are those that he describes as being expressed in the evolutionary exploration.

Missed opportunities

It would have been nice if the author had taken a look at form in the realm of the atom. his-but he doesn't.

So where does he think the morphogenetic field is in terms of objective reality-which is, after all, what scientists are after understanding.

Rather than going backwards (downwards?) into the realms where chemists have a good grip on things, the author proceeds to higher sophistication with the fascinating generic forms we have already commended the author for documenting.

So we could rephrase the author with the advantage of having the support of physics and chemistry: The Science of Qualities involves a morphogenetic or a developmental field that is the form to a probability field. Systems are always engaged in making and remaking their interactions with their environment and exploring the potential for generating new wholes.

With this addition I have no hesitation in recommending this book for those who wish to keep abreast in the struggle for the soul of evolution.

An offering to God and True Parents on my 21st Birthday:

Triumphant Love

Before I was born, you chose me to be a soldier of True Love
You fought against the storm...
Sweat, blood and tears were shed
But love, triumphant love persevered to the end!
Deserts, mountains and rocky roads were the paths to pass by
Thanks to hills and valleys that refreshed my heart.
When I thought there was no hope and I was ready to die
You took me in your arms and sang a lullaby:
"Love, triumphant love shall never die."
Then it was time for me to go on
A time of realization and decisions to be made
For what was my purpose in life?
Was I ready to fight?
Only then, I knew it was my turn
I walked to the top of the mountain and prayed for answers...
A beaming light carved my heart open
Truth and True Love were the reasons to be chosen!
There I pledged myself to you...
Because of your love I am alive
Because of your heart I can go on
And because of love, triumphant love I shall never die!

Natalia Santiago

January 1995

Unification Artists

by Harry Phillips-Sterling, VA

November was an important month for the Unificationist artistic community. The Akinlan Art Alliance held its first exhibition at the Arnold Bernhard Arts Center at the University of Bridgeport from November 15th through December 20th of this year. Hyo Jin Nim Moon gave the name Akinlan to this international group of Unificationist artists just days before the exhibition opened. By combining the English words "akin" and "land", Akinlan has the meaning of "land of kindred people."

Unlike other art movements in the past which were formed by artists working with similar styles and ideas about how to produce art, the Akinlan artists are more concerned with "why" they produce art. The twelve artists in the alliance come from six different nations and use very different styles. What they have in common is their inspiration and motivation which comes from each artist's study and application of Rev. Moon's Unification Principle and Theory of Art.

The styles of painting ranged from expressive abstractions to highly detailed realism. Anthony Coffey's four large abstracts on gessoed fabric were full of a vibrant energy, with elongated forms pushing and pulling in brown tones on white backgrounds. Anthony, originally from North Carolina, is a student at the Boston Museum's School of Fine Arts. Joong Hi Lee, a professor of art at Wonkwang University in Korea, uses Korean dancers and Buddhist shrines for his underlying forms, but they are just barely recognizable through intense, vibrant primary colors and the energetic, gestural flow of paint.

Also working on the edge of abstraction is the Japanese artist, Wabe, who is currently living and working in New Jersey. His triptych Stream had a rich, full quality, as if shapes could be seen at different depths in the water, with the hint of autumn leaves on the surface.

Trying to span both abstract and realist worlds, the Korean artist Bang Young Park exhibited works in three very different styles. Among his works were abstract paintings containing singular black brush strokes as well as Chinese and Korean characters, and also highly detailed intense portraits. His third style used figures energetically and expressively, and included the works Falling Man and Fire Maker. Bang Young Park is currently working in the Graphics Department at the Manhattan Center Studios.

Another artist combining both abstract and realist elements in a unique way is Cynthia Toffey, the only woman represented in the show. Her early works combined elements such as truck doors, candy wrappers and hands. By superimposing historical figures such as Harriet Tubman and the biblical Judith on her Pop Art sensibility, she has created a depth of meaning and purpose which is refreshing. She also deserves special recognition for attending to many of the details that helped make this show a reality.

Tim Folzenlogen's more recent street scenes of his beloved Manhattan have a more intense contrast between light and shadow than his earlier works. His ability to find colors in the steel and shadows of the George Washington Bridge creates new perceptions of mundane objects.

Another artist using light and shadow to convey mood is the Austrian, Karl Leonhardtsberger. His mountainous landscapes were almost monochromatic and their high vantage point added to the disquieting mystery of these paintings.

Ull Kim, another of the Korean artists, offered three portraits of fiercely proud Koreans. These mixed media works were built up from the surface to create a kind of expressionistic bas-relief and gave a very powerful impression. Jan Parker, the British artist now living in Hawaii, in his Song of Eternal Love, showed us an elderly man watching over a white-robed couple and child, surrounded by light and color. Also along more spiritual lines were the works of Swedish artist Benny Andersson. His visionary symbolism, combining planets, galaxies, trees and mountains, created landscapes of cosmic consciousness. He also shared his concept of spiritual beings in Angel-Light.

Kang Ill Lee, the fourth of the Korean artists, used cardboard boxes for his surfaces, some still intact as boxes and others flattened out. His deft use of the acrylic medium transformed these boxes into his own personal vision of the landscape from his studio window in Bridgeport. Dennis Holcomb's vivid close-ups of various flora gave viewers a second look at some of nature's beauty. Dennis is currently living and working in Crofton, Maryland.

The Akinlan artists are striving to fulfill the purpose stated in their exhibition brochure. "We from different countries gather here today to overcome the confusion of this society and set out on a journey to search for true beauty. Furthermore, we sincerely hope to become a beacon of true light for this generation and experience the joy of true creation."

A special mention of praise goes to Clayton Lee, the Director of the School of Fine and Applied Arts at Bridgeport University, for his help in making the exhibition possible.

The Akinlan Art Alliance would like to communicate with artists and art enthusiasts both in the U.S. and around the world who share similar goals. If you would like to be included on the mailing list, please write to: Harry Phillips, 1037A Margate Ct., Sterling, VA 20164.

Un Jin Nim

Contributed by Nancy Oldenettel, Federal Way, WA

The following are some excellent points Un Jin Nim shared with Nancy after her speech in Seattle.

Un Jin Nim spoke to us in a casual and personal way about the direction we need to go to be effective in our own lives and in reaching out to young people. She said that it is important for us to stop looking at True Parents to find our source of inspiration and relationship to God. It is vital that we go inside ourselves and find the source of God within us. She said that there is no difference between Father or you and me except that his will is stronger. He needs sleep just like everyone else, but he wills himself to sleep only two hours a night even at the age of 74.

She said that we should acquaint ourselves with and be able to express sincere interest in what young people are interested in. We should be able to meet them where they are and not expect them to meet us where we are at. We have to reach out with an unconditional attitude and with genuine interest and enthusiasm; otherwise there will be no attraction. If we think they are evil and we can't relate to them, this is not unconditional love.

Don't think that there is a generation between you, or dwell upon it when you talk to them. You are how you think. Your spirit inside you is a young person. If you just listen to them talk about their lives, their hopes, dreams, and difficulties, they will come to trust you and seek you out. . . . If you don't offer exciting ideas and programs, there is nothing to attract young people. It has to be more personal and relevant for them.

She said that witnessing now isn't like before when a member left in the morning and crawled back into the center for safety at night.

Think, act, be new. Be reborn, whatever it takes. Find the spark of life that brought you to the movement and set you on fire. Without that spark, there is no life inside. This is the point of the Principle. Without it you can't hope to inspire someone else. Whatever it takes, find that spark inside of you again.

She said there is too much focus in the blessed families on their own children. This will eventually create a foundation which will crumble on itself. Children won't "get it" in the future if the parents don't set the example to love their community and their world at the sacrifice of the family.

The Principle is basically simple but it is deep. If we could understand Father in his native language we could understand so much depth which is never captured in the translation or the opinion of the one relating the information. She emphasized that it is important to hear or read Father's speech ourselves because once it passes through one or two leaders, it is filtered to fit their perception of the message. Each person receives Father's words from their own perspective and needs. There may be a message only you can hear.

If a leader is crushing you, remember that the point of the exercise is to learn how to love your enemy. Don't let them crush you inside. True Parents don't want members to be crushed. Our only main point is to learn unconditional love in any of our activities. Unconditional love is our goal in life. It is our final goal.

Nancy says: Just in the short time I was with her, I felt that she is a very natural person. She feels uncomfortable in unnatural settings. I felt in her a confidence which comes from who she is and recognized that this is not meant to intimidate or judge but to move us so we also find the confidence to live from the center of our true self. Then we are completely liberated to express love freely to the entire world without reservation.