Saturday, July 30, 2011

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رسالة من دكتور سلفي للمجانين الذين تظاهروا في ميدان التحرير 29-7-2011

رسالة من دكتور سلفي للمجانين الذين تظاهروا في ميدان التحرير و في كل ميدايين مصر اليوم ، مفتعلين معركة لم تكن موجوده اساساً ذكرتني بمعركة المادة الثانية التي بدأها الألعبان حسان و الشرير شيخ الأزهر علي الرغم من انه لم يكن هناك نقاش و لا كلام عن تغيرها ، و ابتلعوا بغبائهم و قلة دينهم و حبهم للدنيا الطعم الذي و ضعه مجلس القلل ، و هذا الرجل رجع من التحرير غاضباً علي ما فعله المغفلون عباد الشيوخ هناك 

رصد | وجهة نظر دكتور سلفى عاد من ميدان التحرير وقال "مايلى : 

واحـرّ قلباه على أمّـتي


عائدٌ من ميدان التحرير .. بعد مليونية 29 يوليو
والقلب يلهج : ربح السلفيون ـ مؤقتاً ـ وخسر الوطن كله ..
أعلم أنّ الضجيج وارتفاع الأصوات يُخمِد صوت العقل ويطمس الحكمة ..
وأعلم أنّ نشوةَ الانتصار ـ ولو كان موهوماً ـ تحول دون الاستماع أو الاستجابة ..
ورغم اجتماع هذه الظروف فإنّ علينا أمانةً نؤدّيها ، وإنْ لم يستمعها مَنْ وُجِّهت إليه ..

لقد كانت هذه المليونية " ضرورة " فرضها تغوّل الليبراليين وشطط مطالبهم ، لذا خرجنا..
كما كانت " فرصة " رائعةً لحوارٍ بنّاء يؤسّس لمستقبلٍ يؤمّله الجميع .
فلماذا أخذتنا الحميّة بعيداً عن مواطن الحكمة ؟!
ولماذا فعلنا مع غيرنا ما نُنكِره عليه ـ من التحرّش فضلاً عن الإقصاء ـ ؟!

يا أهل ديني : لو سألنا عشرةً من إخواننا الكرام المطالبين بتحكيم الشريعة :
ما الشيء الذي لو حدث في البلاد لأيقنتم أنّ الشريعة مطبّقة ؟! فهل تظنّ أنك ستحصل
على إجابةٍ واحدة من عشرة أشخاص ؟! فكيف بمائة ، فكيف بألف ، فكيف بمليونين ؟!

إخوتاه :
إذا كنا نحن أصحاب الهمّ نختلف حول الأمر ، فكيف الظنّ بغيرنا ؟!
بل كيف الظنّ بقوم ساءت علاقتنا بهم لعقود طويلة .. كيف يفهمون الأمر ؟!

كان أمامنا الكثير والكثير لنغنمه من هذا الموقف التاريخيّ
ولم يكن لذلك كُلفةٌ عليكم إلا ما وصّتكم به شريعتكم التي جأرتم بضرورة تطبيقها
فقط أنْ تملكوا أنفسكم ، ولا تنساقوا وراء أهواء النفوس بالتباهي والاستعراض
لقد أضعتم جهود كثيرين مهّدوا بالخير لنزولكم ، واستقطبوا الشباب إليكم
فلم يكن عليكم سوى أن تقطفوا ثماراً غرسها ورواها غيركم
ماذا لو أنكم صافحتم مخالفيكم ، وأهديتم مبغضيكم ، وابتسمتم في وجوه الناس ؟!
إنكم لن تسعوا الناس بأموالكم ولكنْ يسعهم منكم بسط الوجه وحسن الخلق ..
ماذا يكلّفكم ذلك ؟!
وكأننا لا نذكر رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم حين دخل مكة ؟؟!!
إننا دعاةٌ قبل أن نكون ساسةً .. رحمةٌ قبل أن نكون حزماً وردعاً
وإنما يرحم الله من عباده الرحماء .. ومن لا يَرحم لا يُرحَم

أخذتم فرصتكم فضيعتموها ..
وأعلنتم المواثيق وخالفتموها ..
فهنيئاً لكم جولة اليوم الخاسرة ..
واعلموا أنّ الحياةَ أكبر من موقف ، وأعظم من مجرّد جولة
فإن تماديتم فأبشروا بعواقب الجهل والبغي عاجلاً غير آجل
وإن تعتذروا عن الخطأ فذاك الظنّ بالكرام .. وكلّ بني آدم خطاء

http://www.rassd.com
By: R.N.N | شبكة رصد

When Is Intuition Not Intuition?

Sometimes what feels like a gut feeling is actually a mental glitch. The reason: We were built for life on the African savanna, not for the urbanized, industrialized, mechanized world most of us inhabit. "Our brains run on what amounts to a 100,000-year-old operating system," says Dean Buonomano, PhD, a professor of neurobiology and psychology at UCLA and the author of Brain Bugs: How the Brain's Flaws Shape Our Lives.

The result? Our intellectual equipment has its flaws. For instance, we're more afraid of being killed by strangers (rough odds: one in 100,000) than by cars (one in 10,000) because our instinctive fears haven't caught up with the dangers of the 21st century. Another example: If you could have $100 right now or $120 a month from now, which would you choose? Most people select the immediate cash because our ancient impulses steer us toward short-term gratification over long-term benefit.

An additional blind spot arises from the nature of our memory, which can cause us to confuse related concepts. Try this exercise, adapted from Brain Bugs:

Answer the first two questions below aloud, and then blurt out the first thing that pops into your mind in response to sentence 3:
  1. What continent is Kenya in?
  2. What are the two opposing colors in the game of chess?
  3. Name any animal.
About 50 percent of people answer sentence 3 with an animal from Africa, and roughly 20 percent say "zebra." But when asked to name an animal out of the blue, less than 1 percent of people answer "zebra." The skewed responses are due to an unconscious phenomenon known as priming, in which thoughts of one concept spread to related concepts, making them more likely to be recalled.

When an unexpected answer or impulse seems to burble up inside, it could be a great hunch—or it could be one of these mental glitches. By knowing the brain bugs most likely to trip you up, you'll be better equipped to tune them out.

Annie Murphy Paul

Professional-Intuitive-Susan-King-How-to-Develop-Your-Intuition

In 1986 Susan King hit her head—hard—in a car accident. The result was more than a concussion. Afterward, when King looked at people, she saw images of events occurring in their lives and had flashes of insight about them. With uncanny knowledge of their situations, she has been able to advise clients on everything from job searches to divorce proceedings. King refers to her work as intuitive counseling, and though her vocation may seem rarefied, she believes that intuitive power is available to everyone. "To me it's our body's radar, helping us make all sorts of decisions—if only we're willing to pay attention."

My intuition has gone through a metamorphosis from the time I was a young child to where I am now. I used to just get feelings. I went from getting feelings to having dreams, to seeing symbols that meant things, to seeing things actually happening to other people, to feeling that what's happening to other people is happening to me.

Intuition is knowing without knowing. It's instinctively knowing something that you don't know how you know.

You meet people and you have a subconscious feeling: You like them or not. You trust them or you don't. And sometimes you stop and think, "Where does that come from? What is that?" I believe that just as we hear and see and smell and taste, this is another sense we have, but it's one we don't recognize. I think it's almost an animal sense that we've forgotten.

We were better at intuition in the past. With modern technology and the frantic pace of life, most people today spend their lives running. Never stopping to listen. There's no time for the mind to be quiet to listen to anything. And then when a problem comes: trauma. Because people are not in touch with themselves at all.

You have to incorporate in your day some quiet time to listen to that voice. If you don't, you won't hear it. But it's there. It's meant to guide us.

If you were to go out and meet somebody, spend an hour with them, and there was an attraction, and you came back home and wrote down the first thing you felt when you saw them, when they spoke to you, when they touched your shoulder—you may not realize it, but you'd find that you'd already built a subconscious profile of the person. We all have that capability, but we don't use it.

I'll tell you a group who uses intuition: people who do martial arts. They have to anticipate what their opponent's going to do. Remember Bruce Lee? Even people coming from behind, he could see. It's like he had eyes in the back of his head.

There are times when you get a feeling about something—say, 'I don't want to get on this flight'—and you wonder: 'Is it my anxiety, or is it real?' It's difficult to know what's fact or fiction. You can only judge over a period of time. You have to gain confidence in your ability to listen.

Number one, you can build up to 15 minutes a day of sitting and focusing on your breathing. So that you have quiet time to connect with your inner self.

Number two, every day, live the day and enjoy the day. Don't be anxious about, 'Is this gonna happen or is that gonna happen?' Walk through your day—don't run. Get a little notebook, a tiny thing that fits in your pocket. When you have a feeling about something, write it down. That way, when your feeling later turns out to have been correct, you can go back and see that your instincts were working. And that builds your 
confidence. 

Intuition is like a muscle. You develop it the more you use it.

One of the worst things in life is indecision and confusion. It plagues everybody. But confusion is sometimes a blessing when it stops you from making a move, because sometimes you're not supposed to make a move.

I say to people, "You don't walk down stairs blindfolded, you don't drive a car blindfolded—why would you want to make massive life-changing decisions when you can't see what you're doing? You have to wait for clarity." So to me, confusion can be a kind of intuition: your body's way of saying, don't do anything right now—just go with the flow and the answer will come.

I've given lots of talks, to all kinds of groups, and sometimes you'll get people—usually men—who will say, "I think it's a load of old rubbish." And I'll say, "Well, that's your belief. I'm not here to change your belief."

The most important thing is just to trust it. Trust in your gut. Trust that first feeling you feel about something. Because that very first feeling is usually the right one.

Casablanca-Time goes by


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