Archive for the ‘medical research’ Category

Public Programme: Tools for Tough Times

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

26 November, Delhi, 6:30-8:00pm, India Habitat Centre, Gulmohar Hall
(We hope to have audio and photos from this past event soon. Stay tuned.)

When we face tough times in our lives, it can be challenging to know what to do–what direction to take, how to proceed, what to change, etc. We will explore some unique tools and powerful techniques to help you:

  • Change your habits, and patterns in your life
  • Tune into your intuition more deeply, for direction and decision-making
  • Magnetise success through energy and right attitudes

Presenters:
Dharmaraj Iyer, CEO of Harmony at Work, graduated from MIT with a Masters Degree in Computer Science. He spent several years in computer research, consulting at AT&T Bell Labs, Xerox, National Semiconductor, and AOL.

Haridas Blake, Director, is a founding member of Ananda Sangha, an internationally recognized NGO. He helped manage two of its international retreats, teaching professionals throughout America and Europe a wide range of yoga-related subjects.

Sponsored by: Foundation for Peace, Harmony & Good Governance

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The Brain—Engineered for Higher Awareness

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
Dr. Peter van Houten

Dr. van Houten

by Peter van Houten, M.D.

Dr. van Houten serves as Medical Director of the Sierra Family Medical Clinic and is a longtime resident of Ananda Village. This article was originally published in Ananda’s Clarity Online Magazine.

In the early 1980’s, I attended a revolutionary conference for scientists who specialize in the brain and nervous system called, “The Ever-changing Brain.” New information was being discovered about the nature of our brain and central nervous system that corroborated strongly with what the ancient spiritual traditions of yoga said about the brain’s ability to change. According to the old scientific model in the West the brain didn’t change much during a person’s lifetime. The brain developed through childhood and adolescence and somewhere around age twenty, it was thought, our brain cells began to die off without being replaced. After that, it was a race to see how many brain cells you would lose before you died! It was pretty grim. (more…)

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