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moon:\moon\ honors the power, cycles and light

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Item No. C1010-04

obelisk (back right) - 3"x8", burns up to 80 hours

 

size: obelisk

 

price: $18.00

 

  other sizes available:

       small pillar  |  medium pillar  |  large pillar

 

quote on label:

"When you come to the edge of

 all that you know and are about to

 step into the unknown, faith is knowing

 one of two things will happen:

 There will be something to stand on,

 or you will be taught how to fly."

—Unknown

 

color: dark purple

scent: lilac

gemstone: peridot

 

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Our Recommended Books, Music & Movies for Faith

zena moon sells books, CDs and DVDs in association with Amazon.com. To order, click on the item's title or image, then add it to your Amazon shopping cart. Orders are then filled and shipped by Amazon. Send us your recommendations for this page--we may post them here.

 

Last updated 4/8/2005

 

Icon  Books

1.  Faith: Trusting Your Own Deepest Experience

    by Sharon Salzberg (Paperback - 2003)

    Avg. Customer Rating:

 

   From Amazon.com: Bestselling author Sharon Salzberg explores the meaning of faith through her personal story about a harrowing childhood of isolation and loss (a father's abandonment, a mother's early death) and her eventual journey into the Buddhist tradition. The overriding message, explains Salzberg, is that faith is "not superficial or sentimental: it does not say everything will turn out all right." So what is faith, if not trust in a happy ending? Salzburg, the cofounder of the Insight Meditation Society, explains that faith resides not in the outcome, but in the willingness to see the possibility for change.

 

"The first step on the journey of faith is to recognize that everything is moving onward to something else, inside us and outside.... We see that a self-image we've been holding doesn't need to define us forever, the next step is not the last step, what life was is not what it is now, and certainly not what it might yet be."

 

Like the great teachers of Buddhism, Salzberg relies on her stories to make the teachings relevant. She shifts effortlessly from the voice of a memoirist to the voice of a master teacher. Through her insights, we come to understand faith as a verb. Faith means never giving up on the possibilities of each moment, always seeing "our own potential for happiness, for vibrant wisdom and sustained compassion--a potential that all beings share."

 

 

2.  Plan B: Further Thoughts on Faith

    by Anne Lamott (Hardcover - 2005)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

 

   From Amazon.com: Five years after her bestselling Traveling Mercies, Lamott sends

   us 24 fresh dispatches from the frontier of her life and her Christian faith. To hear her tell it, neither the state of the country nor the state of her nerves has improved, to say the least. "On my forty-ninth birthday, I decided that all of life is hopeless, and I would eat myself to death. These are dessert days." Thankfully, her gift for conveying the workings of grace to left-wing, high-strung, beleaguered people like herself is still intact, as is her ability to convey the essence of Christian faith, which she finds not in dogma but in our ability to open our hearts in the midst of our confusion and hopelessness. Most of these pieces were published in other versions on Salon.com, and they cover subjects as disparate as the Bush administration; the death of Lamott's dog, her mother and a friend; life with a teenager and with her 50-year-old thighs--yet each shows how our hearts and lives can go "from parched to overflow in the blink of an eye." What is the secret? Lamott makes us laugh at the impossibility of it all; then she assures us that the most profound act we can accomplish on Earth is coming out of the isolation of our minds and giving to one another. Faith is not about how we feel, she shows; it is about how we live. "Don't worry! Don't be so anxious. In dark times, give off light. Care for the least of God's people!" Naturally, some pieces are stronger than others--her wonderful style can come across as a bit mannered, the wrap-up a bit forced. But this is quibbling about a book that is better than brilliant. This is that rare kind of book that is like a having a smart, dear, crazy (in the best sense) friend walk next to us in sunlight and in the dark night of the soul.

 

 

3.   Hope for the Flowers

    by Trina Paulus (Paperback - 1973)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.9 out of 5 stars

 

   A zena moon Essential Book

From Amazon.com: No better description than the one on the cover: "A tale--partly about life, partly about revolution and lots about hope for adults and others (including caterpillars who can read)." This is the most delightful story of searching, faith, revolution and transformation I have ever read. As one Amazon reviewer wrote: "Reviewing Hope for the Flowers is like trying to review a butterfly. If you haven't read this book lately, chances are you need it in your life today."
 

 

 

Icon  Music

1.   Faith

    ~ The Cure (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 1981

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.54 out of 5 stars

  

From Amazon.com: If you want to hear a band in its prime, check out Faith, The Cure's deepest and most mind bending albums ever recorded. The third track, "Other Voices," is amazing--tribal drum beats, a bass line that rumbles through in perfect rhythm, Smith holding in with a dreamy strum of his electric, and layers of floating smith vocals that will send shivers down your spine. and that's just one song.

 

This album has been an all time favorite of mine for almost 15 years, and I don't think I'll ever tire of it. Every song--from the chillingly, eerie pace of "All Cats Are Grey" (a Cure classic in every sense) to the all bass guitar driven "Primary"--yes, this album is dark, but it is more peaceful than anything else. I can listen to Faith for hours while I write, chill with friends, or just drift off into a deep sleep. To listen to Faith is to experience Faith. One of The Cure's finest.

 

 

2.   Passion [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED]

   ~ Peter Gabriel (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 2002

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.91 out of 5 stars

 

A zena moon Essential CD

From Amazon.com: To call Passion a pivotal recording in the development of world music would be a significant understatement. What makes Passion so undeniably important is its global reach and expert handling of what could've easily become polyglot babble. Vocalists Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Youssou N'Dour, and Baaba Maal bring strong Middle Eastern and African voices to the project, and Balkan textures come via the ney flute and doudouk. But Gabriel is the glue, offering electronic ambient flows between the multiple streams. Gabriel also brings something even less tangible: an awesome visual imagination that takes often seamless sounds and makes them impress the listener with picturelike colors and phrasing. This is, however, far more than an ambient global mix. The intertwined rhythms stand out, both on their own and as brushstrokes on a larger canvas. Never mind that Passion helped launch North American careers for N'Dour and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan--this is a stellar musical achievement by any standard.

 

 

3.   Requiem & Magnificat

   ~ John Rutter (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 2000

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

    

A zena moon Essential CD

From Amazon.com: Two of John Rutter's most popular large-scale choral works are paired in this bargain-priced CD. Requiem, his first composition written without being commissioned, is a convincing affirmation of Christian doctrine on death and eternal life. It is also a substantial and sincere work that strives to be widely appealing while preserving a spiritual context centered on themes of light and consolation. Highlights include "Out of the Deep," its modal tune and harmonies giving it the flavor of a spiritual, and the wonderfully gentle and restful 23rd Psalm. Rutter personalizes his Requiem by adding movements not traditionally part of the Requiem Mass--passages from the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, for instance--and this proves to be an effective strategy. Rutter's own, first-class Cambridge Singers are superb, as usual, and soloist Caroline Ashton steals the show with her heavenly Pie Jesu. The Magnificat shows Rutter at his most engaging, thoughtful, and adept. His usual canny sense of tunefulness and rhythmic rightness, flavored with splashes of pop harmony, accomplish his purpose in the Magnificat: to depict Mary's prayer as a celebratory occasion rather than a somber one.

 

 

 

Icon  Movies

1.   The Incredibles (Full Screen 2-Disc Collector's Edition)

    Starring: Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter

    (2004) ~ DVD

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

 

    From Amazon.com: After creating the last great traditionally animated film of the 20th century, The Iron Giant, filmmaker Brad Bird joined top-drawer studio Pixar to create this exciting, completely entertaining computer-animated film. Bird gives us a family of "supers," a brood of five with special powers desperately trying to fit in with the 9-to-5 suburban lifestyle. Of course, in a more innocent world, Bob and Helen Parr were superheroes, Mr. Incredible and Elastigirl. But blasted lawsuits and public disapproval forced them and other supers to go incognito, making it even tougher for their school-age kids, the shy Violet and the aptly named Dash. When a stranger named Mirage (voiced by Elizabeth Pena) secretly recruits Bob for a potential mission, the old glory days spin in his head, even if his body is a bit too plump for his old super suit.

 

Bird has his cake and eats it, too. He and the Pixar wizards send up superhero and James Bond movies while delivering a thrilling, supercool action movie that rivals Spider-Man 2 for 2004's best onscreen thrills. While it's just as funny as the previous Pixar films, The Incredibles has a far wider-ranging emotional palette. Bird takes several jabs, including some juicy commentary on domestic life ("It's not graduation, he's moving from the fourth to fifth grade!").

 

The animated Parrs look and act a bit like the actors portraying them, Craig T. Nelson and Holly Hunter. Samuel L. Jackson and Jason Lee also have a grand old time as, respectively, superhero Frozone and bad guy Syndrome. Nearly stealing the show is Bird himself, voicing the eccentric designer of superhero outfits ("No capes!"), Edna Mode.

 

 

2.   21 Grams

    Starring: Sean Penn, Benicio Del Toro, Naomi Watts

    (2003) ~ DVD

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.2 out of 5 stars

 

From Amazon.com: Sean Penn and Benecio Del Toro, two of the most gripping actors around, play wildly different men linked through a grieving woman (Naomi Watts, Mulholland Drive, The Ring) in 21 Grams. Del Toro (Traffic, The Usual Suspects) delves deep into the role of an ex-con turned born-again Christian, a deeply conflicted man struggling to set right a terrible accident, even at the expense of his family. Penn (Mystic River, Dead Man Walking) captures a cynical, philandering professor in dire need of a heart transplant, which he gets from the death of Watts' husband. 21 Grams slips back in forth in time, creating an intricate emotional web out of the past and the present that slowly draws these three together; the result is remarkably fluid and compelling. The movie overreaches for metaphors towards the end, but that doesn't erase the power of the deeply felt performances.

 

 

3.   Rabbit-Proof Fence

     Starring: Everlyn Sampi

     (2002) ~ DVD

     Avg. Customer Rating: 4.6 out of 5 stars

    

From Amazon.com: Based on a true story, Rabbit-Proof Fence moves with dignified grace from its joyful opening scenes to a conclusion that's moving beyond words. The title refers to a 1,500-mile fence separating outback desert from the farmlands of Western Australia. It is here, in 1931, that three aboriginal girls are separated from their mothers and transported to a distant training school, where they are prepared for assimilation into white society by a racist government policy. Gracie, Daisy, and Molly belong to Australia's "stolen generations," and this riveting film (based on the book by Molly's daughter, Doris Pilkington Garimara) follows their escape and tenacious journey homeward, while a stubborn policy enforcer (Kenneth Branagh) demands their recapture. Director Phillip Noyce chronicles their ordeal with gentle compassion, guiding his untrained, aboriginal child actors with a keen eye for meaningful expressions. Their performances evoke powerful emotions (subtly enhanced by Peter Gabriel's excellent score), illuminating a shameful chapter of Australian history while conveying our universal need for a true and proper home.

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