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intuition

Item No. C1201-02

medium pillar (not shown) - 2"x6", burns up to 60 hours

 

size: medium pillar

 

price: $15.00

 

  other sizes available:

       small pillar  |  large pillar  |  obelisk

 

quote on label:

"Intuition is a spiritual faculty,

 and does not explain,

 but simply points the way."

Florence Scovel Shinn

 

color: light aqua, with teal and purple swirls

scent: rain & plum

gemstones: chrysoprase, hematite

 

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About This Candle

Pure and simple, I believe intuition is God's guidance. When they say everything we need to know already exists inside of us, they're referring to our intuitiveness and our willingness to hear the voice of our God. Why so many of us often experience a disconnect from, or distrust of, or just plain fear of what we know to be true is downright bizarre! Whenever I don't listen to my intuition, I feel like I'm swimming upstream. Eventually I'll get tired, surrender, and wind up going the direction I've known all along I needed to follow, but dang, why put myself through the struggle? Why not have faith in the truth? I created this candle to help myself feel empowered and excited by what my intuition tells me! To stretch my receptivity for the whispers of Spirit. May it help you too. Carla Blazek, creator, zena moon

Customer Feedback

Marilyn J. (Illinois)

Omygosh this is the loveliest fragrance in a candle...ever! I received one of your intuition candles recently, as ordered as a gift to me by a dear online friend who lives in Australia! You have just the right touch with the fragrances and I surely do appreciate so much the quality of your product. The ripple effect of giving and sharing goes on... Our hearts are joined at the keyboards these days and it is delightful.

 

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Our Recommended Books, Music & Movies for Intuition

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 2/26/2005

 

Icon  Books

1.   Compass of the Soul: 52 Ways Intuition Can Guide You to the Life of Your Dreams

    by Lynn Robinson (Paperback - 2003)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
 

    From Amazon.com: This is the book that will point you in the direction of a new life--the life of your dreams. In Compass of the Soul, Lynn Robinson leads you on a journey of discovery to a life that's full of joy and purpose. She shows you how to tap into your own intuition to reveal the endless possibilities of the life you were meant to live. Each of the 52 chapters contains a motivational quote, an intuition exercise, and a thought-provoking question that you can answer in an intuition journal. The chapters are easy to read and full of practical, down-to-earth advice about how to tune in to what Lynn describes as your "inner success coach." You will learn how to:

  • Take small steps to create positive changes in your spiritual, personal, and financial life.

  • Use your thoughts, beliefs, and expectations to change your life.

  • Find freedom from debt, worry, and fear.

  • Discover your purpose in life.

Do one chapter a week, read the whole book all at once, or pick and choose the areas you want to concentrate on first. More than simply paying attention to your intuition, living an intuitive life means acting on the wisdom you receive. Make the opening of this book the first act in creating the life of your dreams.
 

 

2.  Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking

    by Malcolm Gladwell (Hardcover - 2005)

    Avg. Customer Rating:

 

   From Amazon.com: This is a book about using your intuition to understand situations and how to read people. As with books about intuition, it takes using your intuition or imagination and having facts that makes this book make sense. Simply put, each story shows us how intuition is used in trying situations or in critical situations where a judgment must be made. How the experts just seem to "do what they do" without explaining it, or how sometimes we interpret what we see, ignore what is obvious and look back and wonder why we did not pick up on the clues.

There seems to be subjects here for everyone, an eclectic look into decision making, not scientific completely, maybe even a stretch, but the book is such a quick read as to really keep your interest. I liked his analysis of sports figures, Ted William for one. Williams said he watched the ball hit the bat when would hit. The book reveals that in reality, that is just not humanly possible. It was something else, Williams, an expert, doing what he did best, could not fully explain how he did it.
Blink will open up some very interesting perspectives for those who read it.

 

 

3.  The Seven Whispers: Listening to the Voice of Spirit

    by Christina Baldwin (Hardcover - 2002)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars

 

   From Amazon.com: The connection with our spirit is like a phone line, explains Christina Baldwin in The Seven Whispers. "Sometimes I turn the ringer off. Sometimes I ignore the ringing. Sometimes I pick up the phone with suspicion. Sometimes I get impatient with the interruption." The irony, of course, is that "unlike a lot of other calls, the one from Spirit is the one we are hoping to receive." Baldwin (Life's Companion) excels in helping readers converse with the divine. Here, she devotes a chapter to each of the "Seven Whispers of spiritual commonsense":

 

1.)  Maintain peace of mind ("the cornerstone of a spiritual life")
2.)  Move at the pace of guidance ("rehumanize our speed of life")
3.)  Practice certainty of purpose ("a commitment to figuring out why we are here and what we are going to do about it")
4.)  Surrender to surprise (this helps us "practice the resilience we need to respond to whatever life offers")
5.)  Ask for what you need and offer what you can ("become spiritual traders of life's energy, time and abundance")
6.)  Love the folks in front of you ("look for the good in people even if we don't think it's there")
7.)  Return to the world (remove yourself from the simulated world and "return to the world of the body, the senses, the world of Nature")

 

This is a compact book, packed with a wise woman's spiritual homilies. While no one can make Spirit phone home more often, The Seven Whispers will certainly eliminate the static and make for a better connection.

 

 

 

Icon  Music

1.   The Mask and Mirror

    ~ Loreena McKennitt (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 1994

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.7
out of 5 stars
 

From Amazon.com: McKennitt's travels through Spain and Morocco flavor this album with a distinctly Mediterranean tinge, from the opening "The Mystic's Dream," with its dancing percussion arrangements, to "Marrakesh Night Market," to "Full Circle" and the instrumental "Santiago." "Marrakesh Night Market" is an especially strong performance, with an interesting musical texture; the balalaika, udu drum, and dumbek are played alongside a synthesizer. As usual, McKennitt has set a poem to music, this time Yeats's "The Two Trees," with a lovely introduction on the Uillean pipes. There's also "The Bonny Swans," a traditional lyric, and the CD closes with Shakespeare, as McKennitt sets some of Prospero's words from The Tempest to her own music. Excerpts from McKennitt's journals, included in the CD booklet, make for interesting reading as they shed some light on her source material and inspiration for writing each song.

 

 

2.   Lost in Translation [SOUNDTRACK]

   ~ Various Artists (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 2003

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

 

From Amazon.com: Sofia Coppola has, with two elegant movies, proved herself a talented director with a keen eye for interior life. She's also got great ears. For Lost in Translation the story of a May-December friendship in Tokyo between two displaced Americans, the score is a tonic for jetlag. Coppola prescribes a dose of shoegazer pop, from My Bloody Valentine's chiming "Sometimes" to Jesus & Mary Chain's fuzzed-out "Just Like Honey." The music nails the hazy conscious state of actors Bill Murray (as a movie star with a midlife crisis) and Scarlet Johansson (as an emotionally marooned twenty-something). It also provides a safe, warm envelope in which they can enact their overseas adventures. Working with producer Brian Reitzell, whose band Air scored her previous Virgin Suicides, Coppola lured Valentine's Kevin Shields into providing several slices of dreamy indie-rock and sonic wallpaper, as stylish as it is formless. There's a welcome bit of Japanese goofiness, a funhouse-mirror reflection of U.S. folk-rock courtesy of early-1970s band Happy End. And a "hidden" track provides the audio of Murray, in the film, doing his sleepy karaoke version of Roxy Music's "More Than This."

 

 

3.   Essence

   ~ Lucinda Williams (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 2001

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

    

From Amazon.com: Few artists in recent memory have been able to wring more from less than Lucinda Williams. The hauntingly beautiful, wistful, and often breathtaking Essence is another case in point of how far raw emotion and honesty can carry an artist. Williams's singing is at its paralyzing best throughout 11 bare originals, an incredibly affecting vocal performance by a woman who was not blessed with exceptional tone, range, or pitch. Throughout, her voice is incredibly naked, vulnerable, and wrought with feeling. "Blue" and "Broken Butterflies" are gorgeous anti-lullabies whose simple melodies belie their poignant ruminations. The title track is a sultry and susceptible sex-as-drug come-on while "Reason to Cry" has all the hallmarks of a classic country lament. The only departure from the subdued mood is "Get Right with God," a rousing gospel tune that practically begs for salvation through punishment and is the rare acknowledgement of a world beyond Williams's own fears and desires. More meditative than the personal narratives found on Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, Essence is ultimately more powerful. Williams wallows in sorrow and weakness, and the result is moving and disarming.

 

 

 

Icon  Movies

1.   Antonia's Line

     Starring: Willeke van Ammelrooy

     (1996) ~ DVD

     Avg. Customer Rating: 4.3 out of 5 stars

    

From Amazon.com: To a small Dutch town filled with characters known by such names as Crooked Finger, Loony Lips, and the Mad Madonna, Antonia returns with her daughter Danielle after 20 years away. Covering the next 40 years, Antonia's Line looks at the matriarch and her offspring, stretching out to her great-granddaughter, Sarah. A whimsical story with fairy-tale conventions, this movie deals with the cyclical nature of time as well as the strength of women. While this is not just a "woman's movie," men are regulated to the background in a story that tells of women breaking free of traditional roles. Surprisingly, this movie achieves a light-hearted tone while tackling serious subjects: small-town prejudices, rape, and suicide. Yet the drama's comedic heart shines through as Antonia collects a rather odd assortment of people, outsiders who become part of her extended family. Winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, Antonia's Line is moving and beautiful, imparting a sense of hope and joy to the viewer.

 

 

2.   The Sixth Sense

     Starring: Bruce Willis

     (1999) ~ DVD

     Avg. Customer Rating: 4.2 out of 5 stars

    

From Amazon.com: "I see dead people," whispers little Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment), scared to affirm what is to him now a daily occurrence. This peaked 9-year old, already hypersensitive to begin with, is now being haunted by seemingly malevolent spirits. Child psychologist Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis) is trying to find out what's triggering Cole's visions, but what appears to be a psychological manifestation turns out to be frighteningly real. It might be enough to scare off a lesser man, but for Malcolm it's personal--several months before, he was accosted and shot by an unhinged patient, who then turned the gun on himself. Since then, Malcolm has been in turmoil--he and his wife (Olivia Williams) are barely speaking, and his life has taken an aimless turn. Having failed his loved ones and himself, he's not about to give up on Cole.

 

This third feature by M. Night Shyamalan sets itself up as a thriller, poised on the brink of delivering monstrous scares, but gradually evolves into more of a psychological drama with supernatural undertones. Many critics faulted the film for being mawkish and New Age-y, but no matter how you slice it, this is one mightily effective piece of filmmaking. The bare bones of the story are basic enough, but the moody atmosphere created by Shyamalan and cinematographer Tak Fujimoto made this one of the creepiest pictures of 1999, forsaking excessive gore for a sinisterly simple feeling of chilly otherworldliness. Willis is in his strong, silent type mode here, and gives the film wholly over to Osment, whose crumpled face and big eyes convey a child too wise for his years; his scenes with his mother (Toni Collette) are small, heartbreaking marvels. And even if you figure out the film's surprise ending, it packs an amazingly emotional wallop when it comes, and will have you racing to watch the movie again with a new perspective. You may be able to shake off the sentimentality of The Sixth Sense, but its craftsmanship and atmosphere will stay with you for days.

 

 

3.   Prime Suspect 1

     Starring: Helen Mirren

     (1993) ~ DVD

     Avg. Customer Rating: 4.7 out of 5 stars

    

From Amazon.com: Helen Mirren's Detective Chief Inspector Jane Tennison, the only female DCI on an old boy's club London homicide squad, is like a phantom lurking around the edges of the action while the men rush through their latest murder case, joshing and winking in the kind of male camaraderie the cop genre has celebrated for decades. When DCI Shefford dies of a sudden heart attack, Tennison demands to take over. Despite her superintendent's resistance ("Give her this case and she'll start expecting more."), she becomes the squad's first woman to head a murder investigation. Scrutinized at every moment by her superior officers, Tennison is faced with a case that spirals out from a single murder to a serial spree, a second-in-command who undermines her authority and her investigation at every turn, a team resistant to taking orders from a woman, and a private life unraveling due to her professional diligence. Lynda La Plant's script is a compelling thriller riddled with ambiguity that turns dead ends, blind alleys, and the mundane legwork of real-life cops into fascinating details. Mirren commands the role of Tennison with authority, intelligence, and a touch of overachieving desperation. Superb performances, excellent writing, and understated direction make this BBC miniseries one of the most involving mysteries in years. Look for future British stars Ralph Fiennes and Tom Wilkinson in supporting roles.

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