Author Archives: Jeanie

About Jeanie

I am President of Loiacono Literary Agency, LLC. I have been a literary agency for thirteen years and have over sixty clients and have sold over 200 books to date.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that the best things in life are free.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that the best things in life are free.

That is just about the oldest, most trite, most hackneyed “saying” you could come across today. But it is so, so true. And it is important never to lose sight of that. So look around you. Wherever you see friendship, loyalty, laugher, love…there is your treasure.

Now, today, to whom will you choose to give such treasures in even greater quantity? Someone will ask
you for this today. And when they do, please, please be ready with it, yes?

Then will you know the heaven you are in. For you will be a special angel… www.CWGPortal.com

 

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that your light is seen, your heart is known, your soul is cherished by more people than you might imagine.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that your light is seen, your heart is known, your soul is cherished by more people than you might imagine.

If you knew how many others have been touched in wonderful ways by you, you would be astonished. If
you knew how many people feel so much for you, you would be shocked.

You are far more wonderful than you think you are. Rest with that. Rest easy with that. Breathe again. You are doing fine. More than fine. Better than fine. You’re doin’ great.  So relax. And love yourself today.

Then take in God’s love. Right now, take it in. You deserve it. www.CWGPortal.com

Words from Pep Chickadees, Ants & Progress

Words from Pep

Chickadees, Ants & Progress

Pep Bio-photo 2 for website

Something across the meadow, a fleeting movement inside the brush, caught my attention.  Stepping silently back into the shadows I stood motionless waiting for my eyes to adjust. Was I being watched? By whom, what? My eyes focused, dissected the shapes, colors. Inside my chest my heart responded to the adrenalin brought on by the unknown. I felt its pulse in my neck.  All seemed natural, ordinary, as the mysterious life form remained hidden. I needed patience and slowly leaned against the birch behind me. . . . . . Two minutes, five, ten passed. A chickadee, pondering my catatonic state, darted within reach and began a monologue. Soon two colleagues appeared and this tribunal commenced deliberation as to the meaning of this human fused to the tree. . . . . . “Imagine that – a human that has ceased to thrash about in our home.” The first seemed to say. “Why isn’t it making noise or hauling off parts of our world?” Mused a second. “Don’t trust it. Don’t get too close. It might be a trap!” The third repeated over and over. At one point, to the shock and horror of the third member of the trinity, the first rushed in and snatched a deer fly from the brim of my cap, removed the wings and enjoyed a snack. To my right a downy woodpecker impatiently considered a fissure in the bark as if waiting for fast food at the drive up. . . . . . All around me the show continued. Ants in single file ascending/descending the birch I leaned against, an unfurling fiddlehead stretched skyward as if waking from a nap and there, half buried, an acorn had broken out of its case sending tender yellow root downward and slender diminutive brown stalk with two tiny leaves toward heaven. . . . . . Suddenly, the mystery was revealed. A high pitched snort came from across the way. There she was with two fawns, eye’s fixed on her. Her eyes fixed on me. A hoof abruptly striking the earth shot the little ones into the brush. She turned and with a single leap followed, tail flagging white. Only an occasional rustle and crack revealing their route. . . . . . It was the spring of  ’64. Today I visit this meadow, now covered with asphalt, to buy unessential items of vanity. There is no longer mystery here, no brother/sister creatures, no sedges, rushes, no birch. Today barren hardness surrounds me mixed with unyielding noise. I step up onto the curb as my eyes are attracted to an idyllic poster of Creator’s earth and I question the folly of “progress”.

www.theteacherwithin.com


ONE WORLD  –  ONE FAMILY OF MAN  –  ONE CREATOR OF ALL

“Somethin’s Gotta Go” By Bud Hearn

“Somethin’s Gotta Go”

By Bud Hearn

The pressure builds. The fat’s in the fire. Hell’s gates rattle. Demons run wild. Starvation begins. Lent has arrived. Somethin’s gotta go.

Lent…a forty-day fast, the penitent’s primordial curse.  Conscience compels sinners to re-consecrate their bodies and rebuke the devil. The carnal pleasures of the flesh are sacrificed for the sanctification of our souls. It’s worse than a root canal.

WWJD? We’re afraid to ask. We won’t like the answer. Stones will not become croissants. The approved give-up list doesn’t include Vienna sausages. Cell phones and all sweets must go; but, Oh, God be merciful, please not pork chops!

Fasts are abominable afflictions. They set on fire the course of human nature. People become mean and desperate. They disfigure themselves with ashes. They’re zombies in sackcloth. Hunger drives them wildly into the streets. They wail in grocery stores, drooling on the cookie aisle. They swoon in visions of ecstasy at the very sight of a Hershey bar.

This madness began in the 4th century at the pinnacle of the Epicurean era. Like today, everyone was fat and happy. Hedonism ran rampant, collection plates ran empty. Preaching lacked efficacy and sin lost its sting. Churches needed power to convince congregants of the reality of Hell, the punishment of sin and the ubiquity of the Devil.

An ecclesiastic convocation was called. St. Leo was chosen as its leader. He was an itinerant preacher experienced in river baptisms. He concocted the theory of a forty-day fast. The experiment was based on the clever, but perverted contextual precept of the Holy Writs. Its leitmotif was to affirm that Lucifer, the lictor of the lower regions, controlled the gene pool of the descendants of Adam. That’s us, by the way.

In the scripture story is a river, a bird, a spirit, angels and a desert like Death Valley. The wind is a restless spirit. Rocks, like popcorn, crack and pop in the stifling heat, not unlike the sound of a prison chain gang. Large ominous black birds hover overhead, looking for another carcass to pick.

I re-read the story. The bird adds a nice touch. I once had a pet bird.  A parakeet named JoeJoe. I used to baptize it. It drove the creature mad. It flew in crazed circles. It often lit on my shoulder or head, whereupon it would deposit the remnants of its latest meal as a show of displeasure, or appreciation. Who could tell from such an unstable bird? I was a child then. I often wondered if its droppings were signs from heaven.

St. Leo’s theory had legs. Along with the fast came the Devil and his legions of minions. Like carnival barkers, they made absurd promises to those who were driven mad by hunger. Promises of omnipotence, self-prominence, immortality, invincibility and renown. Hordes of weak penitents relapsed. Laughter rang in the halls of Hell. Church pews filled as backsliding recidivists returned to the horror of primal sin.

The Catholic Church discovered Lent was a solution to the shrinking treasury. It offered to sell ‘indulgences’ to converts for compensation for their weak fortitude, and to buy repentance. The ruse was revealed. The Pope loathed the deception but loved the lucre.

The devil’s real! Avoid him. Never publically admit to fasting. You’ll be cast as a religious nut, an ascetic. You will be despised, reviled, shunned by society. Verily you will have your reward.

Always fast in secret. Never consume things with expired labels or green mold. Let no alcohol stronger than kerosene touch your tongue. It’s ok to gargle with elixirs over 100 proof, but don’t inhale or swallow.

If you’re rich, join the Baptists. They operate a black-market in the re-sale of unused indulgences. And contrary to popular opinion, they cannot turn stones to bread either.

While fasting, never step behind a church pulpit and recite publically the Apostles’ Creed. Forget ever cleaning off the pinnacle of the church’s roof. Angels will not bear you up if you fall.

Also, stop wishing your name were Buffett or Obama. Delusions of grandeur are the devil’s domain. The penalty for relapse is having to purchase indulgences from the moneychangers of the Democratic Party. There’s no escape from the horror of that abyss.

We also have the Holy Parchment. If St. Leo appropriated it, so can we. Therefore: When thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth…especially if thy right hand holdeth a coconut cake.  Did I get that right?

image002

Bud Hearn

March 7, 2014

I would say YES, Bud you got it right. Look what Jesus says:

What Defiles a Man Mattthew 15:11
10After Jesus called the crowd to Him, He said to them, “Hear and understand. 11“It is not what enters into the mouth that defiles the man, but what proceeds out of the mouth, this defiles the man.” 12Then the disciples came and said to Him, “Do You know that the Pharisees were offended when they heard this statement?”…

I would say so. The only man who has ever had it “going on” is Jesus. One. The rest of us is lacking no matter what we eat, wear, do for a living, drive, live in or look like. Capice? So you can starve yourself, do without whatever you think you can do without, go to confession every day, not have sex and wear a robe, give 10%, etc. All he said to do was:

 Matthew 22:37

Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’38This is the first and greatest commandment. 39And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’40All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

Pretty darn simple. If you are doing those two things, you are worshiping the One and Only God, feeding the hungry, clothing and housing those in need, visiting the sick and those in jail, etc.

Uh-huh.

Jeanie

 

 

 

Deep Calls to Deep By Juniper Ellis

Deep Calls to Deep

By Juniper Ellis

deep calls to deep Ellis

We all know truth when we see it and feel it. Truth carries an actual, palpable energy. This is a large topic, so I’ll just share three quick examples for your further meditations.

A friend of mine was at a Quaker meeting, where people sit in stillness until someone is inspired to speak. After a time, a woman stood and said that in our spiritual lives we need permeable fences, fences like coral reefs or mangrove trees.

A sudden wave swept over my friend: a powerful feeling that she needed to stand and say, “There are no fences!” The feeling was so strong, it was if she had been caught by a tidal force, and tumbled in it.

But my friend was a visitor, and not a Quaker, and did not want to seem disagreeable or unfriendly, so to speak, and so she talked herself out of saying anything at all. And for the rest of that day and night, she felt physically ill. A wave of truth had risen up to express itself through her, and had been blocked, and she was left feeling uneasy and sick and wrong.

Truth doesn’t always require words. A Japanese monk came to this country to teach Zen. He knew only a few words of English, and his students knew no Japanese. Yet he stood in turn in front of each student, and his very presence moved many of them to tears. What was communicated was truth; what was communicated was love. You can’t ask for a more eloquent teaching than that.

So sometimes truth asks us to speak, even when it is not easy or comfortable to do so. Sometimes truth asks us to share ourselves beyond words. Always truth asks us to express kindness. I’m sure you’ve seen and felt the effects of truth spoken roughly. Speaking without care is like pummeling someone on the head or the heart. You cannot help but distance yourself from the very truth you mean to honor.

Rejoice that we belong to truth; truth doesn’t belong to us. We might just as soon claim to own the sunrise or sunset, but we all recognize the rising call of truth. As the Psalmist sings, “Deep calls to deep at the sound of thy waterfalls; all thy waves and thy billows are gone over me.” Deep calls to deep within all of us, the living waters we are, and we are all caught and tumbled in a wave of love that sweeps us far beyond fences. http://www.juniperellis.com/blog

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that life begins at the end of your comfort zone.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that life begins at the end of your comfort zone.

You won’t find glory at the center of safety, but at its edge. You won’t find love at a place where you are
covered, but in the space where you are naked.

You gotta take some risks. You have to not only pick up the dice, but roll ’em. So go ahead, take the gamble. You have nothing to lose except the chance to win.

Life is not long enough to spend it on the sidelines. And you will not have to think but a second to know exactly why you received this message today. www.CWGPortal.com

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that the unexpected is waiting for you. And it contains great good.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that the unexpected is waiting for you. And it contains great good.

Our next insight, our next opening, our next opportunity often comes when we least expect it. Never think for a moment that “the game is over.” It is not.

Just when all the chips are down, the chins should be up. So…chin up. This round may not have gone well, but Ipromise you, this is not the last word. www.CWGPortal.com

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that you should always have your hook baited in the pool you least think there will be a fish.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that you should always have your hook baited in the pool you least think there will be a fish.

Ovid, the Roman poet, said that, and he was right. You never know when and where your next miracle will appear. So be ready. Be open. Be cheerful, receptive, even expectant.

And do not limit the shape and size in which your miracle can come. Sometimes the smallest keys turn the biggest locks.

So be on the lookout today. Be ready. You asked for some help, and you’re going to get it.

NDWBio

www.CWGPortal.com

I will go one step beyond and say to always think positive thoughts. Say to yourself, “Everything is wonderful” and it will be, no matter what. Like on White Christmas with Bing Crosby, “Count your blessings instead of sheep.” We are so very blessed.

Have an awesome day!

 

 

 

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that the mere apprehension of a coming evil has put many into a situation of the utmost danger.

On this day of your life I believe God wants you to know that the mere apprehension of a coming evil has put many into a situation of the utmost danger.

F.L. Lucan said that, and it is right. There is no faster way to bring about misfortune than to think it is coming. Thought is a powerful force, and it is a creative tool that many people give little energy to —
or abandon in the face of any real threat to safety or stability.

What are you worried about today? Why? Rather than worry about it, would it not be a better use of your mental time to visualize a positive outcome? Use your mind in this way today and you will have tapped one of the most extraordinary tools God has placed in your hand for the creation of your tomorrows.  www.CWGPortal.com

NDWBio