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In this video presentation Lilou Mace talks with Dr. Wayne Dyer who shares his amazing healing experience from Leukemia. He quotes an Indian saint Muktananda who was once asked, "What is real ?" and the saint responds, "that which never changes". Dr. Wayne Dyer adds on ... "We are not our bodies ... We are that invisible presence that keeps occupying all of these bodies ..." "Our bodies are always in a constant state of flux and change."


WAYNE W. DYER, PH.D., is an internationally renowned author and speaker in the field of self-development. He's the author of over 30 books, has created many audio programs and videos, and has appeared on thousands of television and radio shows.

His books Manifest Your Destiny, Wisdom of the Ages, There's a Spiritual Solution to Every Problem, and the New York Times bestsellers 10 Secrets for Success and Inner Peace, The Power of Intention, Inspiration, Change Your Thoughts—Change Your Life, and now Excuses Begone have all been featured as National Public Television specials.

Dyer holds a Doctorate in Educational Counseling from Wayne State University and was an associate professor at St. John's University in New York.

Dr. Wayne Dyer is affectionately called the "father of motivation" by his fans. Despite his childhood spent in orphanages and foster homes, Dr. Dyer has overcome many obstacles to make his dreams come true. Today he spends much of his time showing others how to do the same.

When he's not traveling the globe delivering his uplifting message, Wayne is writing from his home in Maui.

"You Don't Get What You Want, You Get What You Are" - Dr Wayne Dyer


Reference : Dr. Wayne Dyer


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'Neurons to Nirvana : The Great Medicines', a feature documentary in development, has already shot several interviews with the world’s foremost researchers, writers, and pioneering psychedelic psychotherapists. These radical healers and dissenters are using ancient concoctions and what were once considered the demon drugs of the ‘60s as essential medicines which they believe should be available for use in sanctioned treatment.


This richly illustrated documentary is poised to tap into a phenomenon which has only recently and superficially touched the mainstream media. November 2008, CNNʼs Dr. Sanjay Gupta talked of Iraq War PTSD veterans who testified to the efficacy of therapy enhanced by MDMA.

A December 18, 2008 headline on a double-page spread in The Economist stated, “Ecstasy may be good for those who can’t get over something truly horrible.” Even Fox Network ran with a (misleading) headline stating that LSD might ‘extend the life of terminal ill patients’. What’s new is that the use of these drugs is not being presented as harmful or as mind candy, but as a rational and valuable addition to therapeutic practice.

Critically acclaimed filmmaker Oliver Hockenhull employs state of the art HD image processing and the techniques of montage — combining fresh interviews, dynamic animations, engaging and imaginative CGI, motion graphic illustrations, brief text insertions, archival news clips, and punctuation of b roll footage — with a nod to the work of the brilliant and popular BBC documentarist Adam Curtis. The audience will be introduced to the hard science, the neurophysiology and neurochemistry of the psychedelics, the subjective experiences associated with their use, and their medical, social and spiritual significance. We will have a master Zen monk talking about Satori and psychedelics; an acclaimed neurologist informing us about the effects of MDMA on the amygdala gland; social anthropologists will talk about the politics of the visionary state; and MDs will reflect on the economies of health as they relate to psychedelics as compared to the antidepressants offered up by the major pharmaceutical corporations.

Our entire society is under constant, ever-increasing stress. Trauma is prevalent and the old standbys of family and social order, for many at least, are inadequate; the system is in chaotic flux and only the level at the heart of the self, the self which is life itself can right the imbalances. As Dr. Dennis McKenna states in one of the interviews "We now can study transcendental experience, transpersonal experience using pharmacological tools. I think that is a huge accomplishment, a huge break from how it has always been."

Human nature is of a technological nature, we are the tool building animals and we only survive because of our reliance on tools, on technologies. The film proposes that psychedelics are banned technologies that have been shuttered aside, marginalized and made disreputable by their misuse and abuse yes— but mostly by blatant ignorance and hubris. As an example of the ludicrous, DMT, dimethyltryptamine, a very powerful psychedelic, which is endogenous to the human body (it is speculated that DMT plays a role in mediating the visual effects of dreaming) is illegal. Thus we are all drug mules walking around with a Schedule I controlled substance inside our own bodies! Because of this ignorance and fear these technologies have been left to languish in the underground and are refused entry into polite society, no corporation can make a dollar on them — the patents have expired and they are taboo. However prohibition on these non addictive drugs, these mind manifesting enhancers is a law against our own nature for we naturally desire and even desperately need to feel the fullness of the ecstatic state, the disappearance of the bounds that constrict us in our ego I, and to fully experience the condition of grace, the condition of being grateful for life.

As we face upsetting economic, social and cultural changes globally and locally, should we not be using every technological advancement to our best advantage?


Why wouldn’t we ?

These questions are explored in 'From Neurons To Nirvana : The Great Medicines' !


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Beyond the hysteria of Reefer Madness and past the deceptive lessons of “Just Say No”, HIGH exposes the true story of America’s war on drugs.

Using government statistics, expert interviews and a large dose of humor, HIGH takes a fresh look at this hot button issue and asks just how much this “war” costs the American taxpayer, an important question to ask in our current economic crisis.

How the U.S. government operates, often knowingly misinforming the public, and who benefits from its policies is an important question for every citizen, regardless of political party. Director John Holowach provides both the necessary historical background and current events for sober answers on marijuana and the DEA’s impact on people’s health and well-being in our modern society in his first documentary, HIGH.



(Note: The ad in the video player is from the novamov website and we have no option but to display the ad if we have to embed the full video here.)

Watch the full documentary on YouTube here !

It includes a violent drug treatment program that tortured children; an overbearing drug czar that doesn't care for the people he hurts in his quest; patients who are being denied the medications they need; doctors being prosecuted for trying to help them; and a substance that we all know of, but nobody wants to talk about.

Reference : True High

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"CannaBiz : The Secret Economy Of Marijuana" is a documentary written and directed by Lionel Goddard and Chris Aikenhead for Omni Film Productions in association with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Canada's $20 billion-dollar marijuana industry is now at a violent crossroads between crime and commerce. Impossible to police, yet steadily gaining public acceptance, the cannabis industry is now so vast and vital to Canada's national economy that it can no longer be ignored.

CannaBiz unfolds in Grand Forks, BC, a small border town nestled in the Kootenay Mountains, where draft dodgers planted the first "BC Bud" in the 1960s. After the pine beetle chewed through what was left of the forest industry, marijuana became the backbone of the local economy. In secret forest plots, basements, barns and high-tech underground bunkers, growers nurture some of the world's most potent bud. Most of the marijuana here, and in the rest of Canada, is destined for the US market, where a pound of premium weed sells for a street price of $4,500.


Across the country, formerly laid-back marijuana growers now live in fear of armed thieves, and smugglers take huge risks to cross the beefed up American border. Conflicted police and RCMP officers like Harland Venema continue to fight a seemingly futile battle. In Grand Forks, Brian Taylor, once nicknamed "the marijuana mayor", is campaigning for medical marijuana as a prescription for economic prosperity. Ex con Sam Mellace dreams of supplying medical marijuana nationally through Shoppers Drug Mart outlets.

With inside access to growers, gangsters and police, CannaBiz untangles the inner workings of the marijuana industry and raises serious questions about Canada's drug laws. Stephen Easton, a leading Canadian economist, recommends the end to marijuana prohibition, yet the government's position is to get even tougher on an industry that now employs as many Canadians as the auto industry. Are the staggering profits from the cannabis industry better off in the pockets of hard-core smugglers and criminal gangs, or would the Canadian economy benefit from taxing this exploding industry?



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