Senin, 26 Agustus 2013

Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

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Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue



Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

Free PDF Ebook Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

Do You Remember Your Dreams? Where do we go at night while dreaming? Are our dreams as real as our waking life, and when we dream. . . who are we? Do we see others we know in our present life, or are there visions that seem familiar, but not? Is there something going on while we sleep that goes beyond random thought, and if so, what is the purpose? H. T. Manogue's Newest Novel, Black Orchid Night, takes the reader on one woman's journey through the hallways of time. She discovers that her dreams are not just unconscious hallucinations, but factual trips through the uncharted territory of her psyche. Her dreams are portals through which her greater consciousness can express itself. .

Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7804068 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.02" h x .64" w x 5.98" l, .93 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 286 pages
Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

From the Author As Shakespeare pointed out, we are such stuff as dreams are made on. We achieve so many things while dreaming, but we don't remember most of our accomplishments. For centuries, our dream reality has been a victim of antiquated beliefs and religious misconceptions. Hence, our dreams are shrouded in mystery. I've been studying the dream reality for the last seven years, and I've discovered some interesting facts about our dream experiences. The first fact is we don't understand the complete nature of our consciousness, so we say, "It's only a dream." But dreams are not meant to be tucked away on the discount rack in our consciousness. We don't realize it, but we ignore part of ourselves in order to function physically in the ongoing expansion of the human species. We believe we are built that way. We fail to see we are in the process of becoming what we already are, and we certainly overlook the undeniable fact that dreams set the tone for that becoming. Dreams exist in levels, just like this reality. Our wakeful levels of reality are measured in time sequences, but there is no time sequence in dreams, so it's difficult to make sense of them and put them in order. Dreams have their own sense of order. On one level, dreams mix wakeful experiences with other probabilities, and we experience a mish-mash of dream events. On another level our conscious beliefs and innate beliefs are homogenized, and we experience people, places and events in unusual ways. These dream levels help us with insights and artful expressions. On another level, we enter the spacious presence of consciousness where all experiences are formed. These dreams experiences are a variety pack filled with waking probabilities that we lay out for physical manifestation. Some are manifested; some are not. Once we enter the fourth level, we wander through the hallways of consciousness and tap into the pulse of the soul. In this hallway, more levels of our dream reality are experienced. We live life as the soul lives it. We are the soul and all its counterparts. This consciousness journey takes us to the reality of the soul.In dreams, the ego is dormant. We free ourselves from our waking focus, so we have the ability to function without a body as we wander through these vast never-ending dream realities. Our body remains in one place, but we still sense the sensations created by our body.We remember some of these levels as we travel though them while dreaming. There are endless levels, and an endless amount of no time to experience them. Our dreams never end. We just move in and out of them, just like we move in and out of this reality. The interesting thing about dreaming is we sense that we don't just live one lifetime. We begin to realize how it feels it to live in multiple lifetimes.Lucid dreamers have the ability to remember portions of dreams, and some of these dreamers also have the talent to dream at will. These people are not different than any other person in terms of psychic gifts or supernatural powers. What these people have is an open channel to other realities. They allow their consciousness to move multidimensionally using practice, a knowing attitude, and an open-ended belief structure. We all could remember where we go in dreams if we used those inner gifts. We rarely use them by objective design, but we always use them subjectively. Black Orchid Night is the story of one of these lucid dreamers. She accepts what she experiences in dreams as another form of reality. Her waking world becomes a schoolroom filled with a new set of choices and probabilities. The lucid dreamer in this story discovers the connection we have with each other no matter what segment of the social ladder they represent. We all have been nasty characters, lonely and depressed individuals that make some really bad choices. The dreamer in this story is surrounded by the anguish of family dynamics and associations that can be considered sleazy and harmfully narcissistic. She begins to understand that she is more than one body and brain in one particular time. She finds another portion of herself living as someone with different skin color, and in a different time period. She realizes that skin color and ethnic backgrounds are choices that produce lesson for soul expansion. She interacts with this particular counterpart, and that connection influences present moment choices for both individuals.It's not necessary to believe you are more than one individual in order to be another individual. We are wired that way by our multidimensional soul. We will still function and expand from the action of the soul regardless of our ignorance. Our mission as individuals is to experience our desires and expand from them. We are part of the creative activity I call the soul. The soul doesn't reincarnate. Reincarnation implies time. The soul creates without time. What we experience and what the character in this story experiences is one incarnation of the many incarnations that the soul expresses for creative expansion. The

From the Inside Flap Cover Art by Paul HarmonFront Cover: Lady Of Shallot - Oil on Canvas 48" x 36"Back Cover: Cinema Dreams - Oil on Canvas 30" x 40"Paul Harmon is an internationally exhibited artist who, from 1985 to early 1998, divided his time between permanent Studio/residences in Paris, France and Brentwood, Tennessee. Harmon's work is well represented in numerous galleries, museums, and major corporate and private collections in Europe, Asia, and the USA.Paul's work hangs in the Tennessee State Museum, the Tampa Museum of Art, the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum, the Museum of The Principality of Monaco, and the city of Caen, France. He was chosen in 1981 to represent the U.S. in the Bienal de Arte, Medellin, Colombia, SA.In 1994, Harmon had a major exhibition at the invitation ofCaen, France. Curated by Galerie Deprez-Bellorget of Paris, this one-man exhibition was the official art show of the D-Day 50th anniversary.Harmon is also the recipient of many major international painting awards including the Prix de la Ville de Monaco and the Prix de la Societe E.J.A. at the XXIV Prix International D'Art Contemporain de Monte-Carlo. The painting Working Man from Harmon's exhibition/competition was chosen by Her Serene Highness Princess Caroline of Monaco for her private collection. In connection with the Prix de la Ville de Monaco, a canvas was commissioned by the Principality of Monaco for its permanent collection.A comprehensive book, "Paul Harmon: Crossing Borders," is a 360-page color volume that showcases some of his work from 1961 to mid-2009. More than 526 paintings are featured in the book, along with on essay by Art Historian Robert L. McGrath, professor of art history, emeritus, Dartmouth College.Harmon's work is featured in the Elmore Leonard movie Pronto, directed by Jim McBride and starring Peter Falk, Glenne Headly and James LeGros. Harmon lives and works in a 1793 farmhouse and studio in Brentwood, Tennessee, that is included on National Register of Historic Places. For more information, visit paulharmon.comCover Art by Paul Harmon

From the Back Cover Do You Remember Your Dreams? Where do we go at night while dreaming? Are our dreams as real as our waking life, and when we dream. . . who are we? Do we see others we know in our present life, or are there visions that seem familiar, but not? Is there something going on while we sleep that goes beyond random thought, and if so, what is the purpose? H. T. Manogue's Newest Novel, Black Orchid Night, takes the reader on one woman's journey through the hallways of time. She discovers that her dreams are not just unconscious hallucinations, but factual trips through the uncharted territory of her psyche. Her dreams are portals through which her greater consciousness can express itself. .


Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

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Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Each masterpiece gets better every time By Kenya Cummings This book is absolutely breathtaking! It is intriguing from page one. The ideas and concepts that are presented in this book are very real to me. I am always impressed with Hal Manogue's creations of literature. Each masterpiece gets better every time. This particular book allowed me to see my self in character. The main character Fiona draws you into her world so far that you can't help but become a part of her journey. This book was well written and laid out. As a writer and author myself I am always grateful to come across work which insights me from a writing perspective and that intrigues me from an entertaining perspective. This book did both. I was even able to highlight pointers as I read, to go back, to take it all in again. Overall this book like many of H.T. Manogue's books is a great book. I would suggest it as great read for anyone who is adventurous and has an open mind. There is a lot to gain from this literature if only you look deeper inside what is essentially presented before you. Loved it!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five Stars By veronica montgomery Nicely written. Very informative.

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Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue
Black Orchid Night, by H. T. Manogue

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