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Using heart and brain to create change

The Shuswap branch of the Canadian Society of Questers presents The Art of Creating In a Time of Change tonight at 7

The Shuswap branch of the Canadian Society of Questers presents The Art of Creating In a Time of Change tonight at 7 in the library of the Downtown Activity Centre.

Ron LaPlace, a student of metaphysics for more than 40 years, and psychotherapist Dorothy Wallis will present a workshop based on Drunvalo Melchizedek’s latest work, Awakening The Illuminated Heart.

They will discuss how the creation process most people are familiar with is derived from the brain and that the brain, by its very nature, operates on the basis of duality and polarity.

Therefore, when people create in this way they manifest not only what they want, but what they don’t want as well – no matter how hard they try.

To LaPlace and Wallis, there is another integrated way. It comes from a place that exists within everyone and is as real as our brain.

According to Melchizedek, the difference is that it is not polarized.

“Our heart is connected to the unified field,” he says in his book, pointing out his belief that when people establish the same level of relationship with their hearts that they have maintained with their brains, they can access a new way to create.

Ron LaPlace has been both a student and teacher of new dynamics in human consciousness for the past 15 years and says he is dedicated to finding new ways to assist humanity.

“I feel I am applying all of my experience and passion in the highest purpose,” he says of his teaching. “Each of us has the spark of the eternal flame within, and each of us is discovering it in our own way and time.”

Wallis says she is dedicated to empowering each person “to heal the wound of separation, to open to the beauty of their own divine essence, and to live centred in the tiny space of the heart.”

“I am delighted to further this process of growth through sharing the Awakening the Illuminated Heart workshop,” she says.

Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Admission is $5. For more information, call Tyhson at 250-835-8236.