Archive for the ‘Renee’ Category

What is a clairvoyant psychic reading? How is clairvoyance used in a psychic reading?

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Clairvoyant psychic readings are based a psychic’s ability to pick up visions of your past, present and future.  It is also described as clear seeing.  It is a visual reading and the reader describes the visions in detail to you to help with a number of life problems.  This sensory experience helps to bring insight and advice to the reader through clear visions.  Our readers at Paramount Solutions, Inc. are all tested psychic readers who must be clairvoyant.

Clairvoyance may be used with other psychic tools.  Some of our psychic readers use tarot cards, telepathy, precognition, vocal vibrations, and other psychic skills.  There are also readers who are mediums, channelers, automatic writers, reiki healers, empaths.  The list of the type of readings goes on and on!  Every reader reads different.  It is up to the client to decide what type of reader will work for him or her.

A good reader will help the client work through his or her issues and questions.  Our readers all specialize in romance, relationships, and all issues involved in dealing with another person.  Many of the readers enjoy picking up on business questions, spiritual issues, career, pets, crossed over loved ones, Astrology, and/ or timing of events.

One thing is for sure!  Psychic readings are fun and for entertainment.  It is always fun to see what will come true in the reading or what the reader can pick up on from your past.  There is a very calming aspect of a psychic reading.  It can give you peace of mind and help in dealing with any sort of life issue.

What is a psychic reading?

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

Psychic Readings

Psychic readings have become very popular over the past two decades. Many people like to get regular readings by phone,  in a group reading, or a personal private session.  It can become confusing as people research the types of psychic he or she wishes to get advice.

The aim here is to help you clarify what a psychic is, where they have come from and how psychic readings can help you deal with your life problems.

Psychics practice meditation to get to their sixth sense and tune into your life situation.  Some psychics use telepathy, mediumship, clairvoyant, clairaudient, channeling, numerology, tarot cards, or a little of each ability. When a reader has an ability to pick up on your situation he or she can come to a deeper understanding of your life issue.

An excellent psychic reading consists of focusing on your life issue.  Our readers at PSI (thepsychicline.com) focus on you.  We want you to get an excellent psychic reading.

If you have ever wondered or been intrigued by the idea of psychic energy and powers, your interest is not by accident.  You are probably drawn to the psychics because of your own psychic ability.  You are open for readings.

Will a psychic tell me my future?

Every reading is different.  Not all readers focus on the future, some focus on the past, some focus on the deceased, some focus on deeper connections to the universe.

Who are some famous psychics?

Sylvia Browne
John Edward
Danielle Egnew

Theresa Caputo

The psychic twins

- NONE of these readers work for PSI.  Nor are we affiliated with any of them in any way.  But, we like that each one brings interest in our industry.

Psychic Mediums

A psychic and a medium is not the same.  Sometimes a reader’s ability overlaps and the reader can to both psychic and medium readings.  Mediums are generally more direct because they are speaking with deceased individuals.  Many think a psychic and a medium are the same, but they are very different terms.

 

The Year of The Dragon

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

The Year of The Dragon.

In Chinese Astrology 2012 is the Year of the Dragon. The Year of the Dragon will start on 23 January 2012 and end on 09 February 2013.

The dates for the Chinese Horoscope coincides with the lunar calendar and the Chinese New Year will always fall somewhere between late January and mid-February. As with the Western Zodiac, the Chinese have 12 signs that follow in the same order. However, the Chinese name the actual year after one of twelve animal signs.

These Chinese Astrology signs are the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey, rooster, dog and pig. Similar to western Astrology, every Chinese Birth Sign has a particular character and qualities. People born in a specific year are believed to take on the character and qualities of the animal after which the year is named.

The Dragon is the fifth sign in the Chinese Horoscope and signifies luck.

Chinese New Year:2012 is Year of Dragon. 2011 is Year of Rabbit. 2010 is Year of the Tiger. 2009 is Year of the Ox; 2008 is the Year of Rat; 2007 is Year of Pig or DingHai – 2006 is Year of Dog. 2005 is Year of 2004 is Year of Monkey. 2003 is Year of Goat

Friday, January 20th, 2012

 

 

 

 

Chinese New Year:2012 is Year of Dragon. 2011 is Year of Rabbit. 2010 is Year of the Tiger. 2009 is Year of the Ox; 2008 is the Year of Rat; 2007 is Year of Pig or DingHai – 2006 is Year of Dog. 2005 is Year of 2004 is Year of Monkey. 2003 is Year of Goat.

This article is all over the place, but definitely gives many great tips on the Chinese New Year.  Don’t forget to get your psychic reading!  – Renee

 

  • 2012 is Year 4709 by Chinese Calendar.
    2011 is Year 4708 by Chinese Calendar.
    2010 is Year 4707 by Chinese Calendar.
    2009 is Year 4706 by Chinese Calendar

At some web sites, the year quoted may differ by one year. For a detailed explanation as to how this happened, see the Reference Here.


 

  • Chinese New Year Graphics

New Year Graphics


 

  • Chinese calendar

Chinese calendar has been in continuous use for centuries. It predates the International Calendar (based on the Gregorian Calendar) in use at the present, which goes back only some 430 years. Basically, a calendar is a system we use to measures the passage of time, from short durations of minutes and hours, to intervals of time measured in days, months, years and centuries. These are fundamentally based on the astronomical observations of the movement of the Sun, Moon and stars.
Days are measured by the duration of time of one self rotation of the earth. Months are measured by the duration of time of rotation of the moon around the earth. Years are measured by the duration of time it takes for the earth to rotate around the Sun. Read more about it.


  • Chinese New Year Days
  • 2005 Feb 9
    2006 Jan 29
    2007 Feb 18
    2008 Feb 7
    2009 Jan 26
    2010 Feb 14
    2011 Feb 3
    2012 Jan 23

    • What is the Chinese New Year’s Day in Year 2011?
    • February 3, 2011 is the first day of the Chinese new year – Year of the Rabbit..

 


There are three ways to name a Chinese year:

  • By an animal (like a mscot).

2008 is known as the Year of the Rat.
2009 is the Year of the Ox.
2010 is the Year of the Tiger
There are 12 animal names; so by this system, year names are repeated every 12 years. More.

  • By its Formal Name (Stem-Branch).
    2011 is the year of XinMao .
    2010 is the year of Geng Yin .

    2009 is the Year of Ji Chou.
  • In the ‘Stem-Branch’ system, the years are counted in 60-year Cycles, so that the Name of the Year is repeated every 60 years.
    2010 is the11-th year in the current 60-year Cycle.
    2009 is the 10-th year in the current 60-year Cycle.

    A “Cycle” is analogous to a “century” in the International Calendar system which is 100 years long.

  1. 2010 is Year 4707 in the Chinese Caledar.
    2009 is Year 4706 in the Chinese Calendar.

 

 

 

    • What’s special about the Chinese New Year in 2006?
    • It was a Leap Year! Unlike the western calendar, where one extra day is added in February, one whole leap month is added in a Chinese Leap Year.

Just think. If you get paid by the month, instead of working an extra day for nothing, you would get an extra month’s pay !!!

This time around, the Leap Month comes after the regular 7-th Month. The “Leap Second Month” begins on August 24,2006. Read more about this here And here.

  • When was the Chinese New Year’s Day in Year 2003?

February 1, 2003. It was the first day in the Year of the Ram (sheep, goat).
This is Year 4700 by Chinese calendar.
 

    • When was the Chinese New Year’s Day in Year 2002?
    • February 12, 2002. It was the first day in the Year of the Horse.

      It is Year 4699 by Chinese calendar.

For those interested in astrology, it is the year of the Black Horse.

  • When was the Chinese New Year’s Day in Year 2001?

      January 24, 2001. This was the first day in the Year of the Snake.
      This is Year 4698.

[Some says this is Year 4638, which is also plausible.
Others claim this year to be either 4699 or 4399, which are almost certainly wrong.]

  • What’s special about the Chinese New Year in 2001?

      It was a Leap Year! Unlike the western calendar, where one extra day is added in February, one whole leap month is added in a Chinese Leap Year.

Just think. If you get paid by the month, instead of working an extra day for nothing, you would get an extra month’s pay !!!

This time around, the Leap Month comes after the regular 4-th Month. The “Leap 4-th Month” begins on May 23, 2001. More about this…

  • 12 Animals 

      Each year is also designated by one of the

12 Animals

      For instance, 2005 is Year of Rooster; 2006 is Year of Dog; and 2007 is the Year of Pig.
      2008 is the Year of the Rat This system is extremely practical. A child does not have to learn a new answer to the question, “How old are you?” in each new year. Old people often lose track of their age, because they are rarely asked about their present age. Every one just have to remember that he or she was born in the “Year of the Dog” or whatever.

 

      Since 2008 is the Year of the Rat, any one who was born in the Year of the Rat is either 1 or 13, 25, 37, 49, 61, 73, 85 or 97 years old.
      When 2009 comes, the person is still born in the Year of the Rat. but he/she is 2,14, 26, 38, 50, 62, 74, 86 or 98 yeas old.
      Thus, instead of asking the question “How old are you?”, ask the person “In which (animal) year were you born?”

More about this.

  • New Year’s decoration at the front of the house 

      Colorful calligraphy called

‘chun lian’ (Spring couplet)

    are as popular as those for Halloween or Christmas.

 

  • What’s this logo at top right corner of this web page?

      The Chinese word for “Spring.” The Chinese calls the New Year’s Celebration the “Spring Festival.” This particular calligraphy is a reproduction of the work by one of master calligrapher Zhao Mengfu

      (1254-1322) who wrote it more than 600 years ago.

More on calligraphy

  • What is the Chinese word for ‘luck’?

      Posters with the word ‘luck’ is often seen around the New Year’s.

Make one yourself. 

 

      For monthly calendar of 2011, 2010 and 2009(designed by

Mr. Meng Zhuo

      ) 2009

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      2010

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Dec2011 Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec

      In Chinese calendar, one of the scheme for counting years is a 12-year cycle. One counts from Year 1,2,3,… up to 12. Then starts over from Year 1. (In modern mathematics, this is modulo 12.) Instead of inventing 12 special symbols for this purpose, 12 animals are used to represent these 12 years. Rabbit (hare), for example, is the 4-th year of the cycle.

See

    more about this.
      For more about Chinese dragons,

go to the Dragon page

      For a bit of fun, look at this.

[Chinese BIG5][Chinese GB][English]

  • How is Chinese New Year’s Day determined?

  • In one sentence, the Chinese New Year is the second New Moon after the winter solstice.It is based strictly on astronomical observations, and has nothing to do with the Pope, emperors, animals or myths. Due to its scientific and mathematical nature, we can easily and precisely calculate backward or forward for thousands of years.
  • One explanation by Rudy Chiang
  • Allen Tsai’s site has more details: about Year 2010 and 

Chinese Zodiac

  • The Japanese word for “New Year’s Greetings” is Kinga Shinnen. 2010 is the Year Heisei 22 in Japan.

    Heisei is the current emperor. Japan is the only country in the world which still number the calender years starting from the ascession of its emperors.

Other Links

    Some of these sites may be worth a visit. More facts than you ever want or need. But interesting!

  • Are there Chinese Graphics analogous to Christmas cards?
  • Solar/Lunar calendar
  • What is the story about the animal of the year?
  • Chinese dragons
  • Fireworks & skywriting
  • Chinese Zodiac
  • Related Websites

Destress your life in 10 easy steps – CNN.com

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Destress your life in 10 easy steps – CNN.com.

Editor’s note: Mark Williams and Danny Penman are the authors of “Mindfulness: An Eight Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World.”

(CNN) — The gloomy days of January can be the most miserable and stressful of the year, but it doesn’t have to be this way. If you follow this ten step guide to destressing your life, then the next few weeks just might become the most serene and fulfilling ones of the year.

One step should be carried out on each of the next 10 days. They’re based on the ideas found in the international best-seller “Mindfulness: An Eight Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World.”

The book uses a program based on mindfulness meditation developed by us at Oxford University in the United Kingdom to relieve anxiety, stress, exhaustion and depression. Mindfulness has proved in some clinical trials to be at least as effective as drugs or counseling for dealing with these conditions.

So what is this mindfulness?

It is quite simply paying full, whole-hearted attention. A typical meditation involves paying full attention to the breath as it flows in and out of the body. Focusing on each breath in this way allows you to observe your thoughts as they arise in your mind and, little by little, to let go of struggling with them. You come to the profound understanding that thoughts and feelings (including negative ones) are transient. They come and they go, and ultimately, you have a choice about whether to act on them.

Mindfulness is about observation without criticism and being compassionate with yourself. When unhappiness or stress hovers overhead, rather than taking it all personally, you learn to treat it as if it was a black cloud in the sky, and to observe it with friendly curiosity as it drifts past.

Scientific studies have shown that mindfulness not only prevents depression, but it also positively affects the brain patterns underlying day-to-day anxiety, stress, depression and irritability. When these negative thoughts arise, they dissolve away again more easily. Other studies have shown that people who regularly meditate see their doctors less often and spend fewer days in hospital. Memory improves, creativity increases and reaction times become faster.

Here are 10 ways to decrease stress and increase mindful meditation in your life:

Day 1: Eat some chocolate

At this time of year, it’s easy to eat too much chocolate and other high-carb “comfort foods.” At first, all that lovely rich food is packed with flavor and totally irresistible. but after a while, you hardly notice it at all. And if you are in a rush, it tends to be wolfed down by the handful.

When you eat without thinking you miss out on so many wonderful flavors, textures and aromas. A single bar of chocolate, for example, has more than 300 flavors. How many of them do you normally taste?

Reconnecting with your senses is the heart of mindfulness, so why not try this chocolate meditation to help you enjoy your food again?

You can listen to it here

Day 2: Go for a short walk

Walking is one of the finest exercises and a brilliant stress reliever. A good walk can put the world in perspective and soothe your frayed nerves. It’s the ideal way of taking a break from all of that work that built up during the holidays.

Walking is one of the finest exercises and a brilliant stress reliever.
Walking is one of the finest exercises and a brilliant stress reliever.

So today, why not go for a 15- to 30-minute walk? You don’t have to go anywhere special. A walk around your neighborhood, taken in an open frame of mind, can be just as interesting as a hike through the mountains.

There’s no need to feel that you have to rush anywhere; the aim is to walk as mindfully as you can, focusing your awareness on your feet as they land on the ground and feeling the fluid movements of all the muscles and tendons in your feet and legs.

Pay attention to all of the sights, sounds and smells. You might see the deep red color of the berries on the trees and bushes or perhaps the inky grayness of slushy ice and snow. See if it is possible to be open to all your senses: Smell the mustiness of the winter leaves; feel the rain on your head; the breeze on your face; watch how the patterns of light and shade shift unexpectedly.

Day 3: Take a three-minute breathing space

When you’re becoming angry, exhausted, anxious or stressed, it’s difficult to remember why you should remain calm. And at such times, it can feel as if the whole world was created just to bait you.

The three-minute breathing space was created to deal with such feelings. Its impact is twofold.

First, it’s a meditation that’s used to punctuate the day, so that it dissolves negative thought patterns before they gain control over your life. Secondly, it’s an emergency meditation that helps ground you when your thoughts threaten to spiral out of control.

When you are carrying out the meditation, you may find that your mind repeatedly runs away with itself. This is entirely natural. It’s what minds do. They leap around and offer up thoughts to your conscious self, much as a child hold’s up his or her toys to an approving adult. When you find that your mind has wandered, gently escort it back to full awareness and continue following the instructions on the track as best you can.

You can listen to the meditation here

Day 4: Do something pleasurable

At this time of year, exhaustion, stress and unhappiness can easily dominate. You can start to experience “anhedonia” — that is, you can’t find pleasure in life. The things you used to enjoy now leave you cold — you feel as if a thick fog has put a barrier between you and simple pleasures, and few things seem rewarding any more.

You can counteract this by taking baby steps toward the things that you used to like doing but have since forgotten about. You can make a start by choosing one or two of the following things to do (or perhaps come up with your own ideas):

– Be kind to your body. Have a hot bath; have a nap; treat yourself to your favorite food without feeling guilty; have your favorite hot drink.

– Do something you enjoy. Visit or phone a friend (particularly if you’ve been out of contact for a while), get together what you need so you can do your favorite hobby, get some exercise, bake a cake, read something that gives you pleasure, listen to some music that you have not listened to in a long while.

Day 5: The intensely frustrating line meditation

Sometimes life can seem like one big long line. You have to line up to buy gas, to pay for the food in the supermarket and all of the bars and restaurants are crammed with people waiting to order.

Next time you feel like screaming “why don’t they just get on with it!”, try carrying out our Intensely Frustrating Line Meditation instead.

When you are in a line, see if you can become aware of your reactions when something holds up your progress. Perhaps you joined the “wrong” line, and are obsessing about whether to make a dash for another one that seems shorter? At such times, it is helpful to check in with what’s going on in your mind. Taking a moment to ask yourself:

– What is going through my mind?

– What sensations are there in my body?

– What emotions and impulses am I aware of?

Mindfulness accepts that some experiences are unpleasant. Mindfulness will, however, help by allowing you to tease apart the two major flavors of suffering — primary and secondary.

Primary suffering is the initial stressor, such as the frustration of being in a long line. You can acknowledge that it is not pleasant; it’s OK not to like it. Secondary suffering is all of the emotional turbulence that follows in its wake, such as anger and frustration, as well as any ensuing thoughts and feelings that often arise in tandem. See if you can see these clearly as well. See if it’s possible to allow the frustration to be here without trying to make it go away.

Day 6: Set up a mindfulness bell

Pick a few ordinary activities from daily life that you can turn into “mindfulness bells,” that is, reminders to stop and pay attention to things in great detail. There’s a list below of things you might like to turn into bells. You don’t have to turn them all into mindfulness bells — they are just suggestions.

– Preparing food: Food offers a host of opportunities to become more mindful. If you’re preparing food, particularly if they are rich in flavors, smells and textures, then try and pay full mindful attention to all that you are doing.

– Washing the dishes: This is a great opportunity for exploring physical sensations. If you normally use a dishwasher, do them by hand for a change. When your mind wanders, shepherd it back to the present moment. Pay attention to the texture of the dishes, the temperature of the water, the smell of the detergent, etc.

– Listening to friends: If you are planning to meet a friend, or bump into one unexpectedly, it’s easy to lapse into the same tired-old conversations. So why not turn a friend’s voice into a “bell” that’s a signal to pay full attention to what they are saying? Notice when you are not listening — when you start to think of something else, what you are going to say in response etc. Come back to actually listening.

Day 7: The ten-finger gratitude exercise

To come to a positive appreciation for the small things in your life, you can try the gratitude exercise. It simply means that once a day you should bring to mind 10 things that you are grateful for, counting them on your fingers. It is important to get to 10 things, even when it becomes increasingly harder after three or four. This is exactly what the exercise is for — intentionally bringing into awareness the tiny, previously unnoticed elements of the day.

Day 8: Do the sounds and thoughts meditation

Sounds are as compelling as thoughts and just as immaterial and open to interpretation. Certain songs might cheer you up — or send you into an emotional tailspin. Sensing the power of sound — and its relationship to thoughts and emotion — is central to mindfulness and to becoming a happier, more relaxed and centered person.

Today, why not try our sounds and thoughts meditation? This elegantly reveals how the mind conjures up thoughts that can so easily lead us astray. Once you realize this — deep in your heart — then a great many of your stresses and troubles will simply evaporate before your eyes.

This meditation gradually reveals the similarities between sound and thought. Both appear as if from nowhere, and we have no control over their arising. They can easily trigger powerful emotions that run away with us leaving us feeling fragile and broken.

You can download the meditation here

Day 9: Reclaim your life

Think back to a time in your life when things seemed less frantic, before the time when some tragedy or increase in workload took over your daily existence. Or it might be more recent than that, before the run-up to Christmas say, or perhaps a relaxing break in the summer.

Recall in as much detail as you can some of the activities that you used to do at that time. These may be things you did by yourself (reading your favorite magazines or taking time to listen to a track from a favorite piece of music, going out for walks or bike rides) or together with friends or family (from playing board games to going to the theater).

Choose one of these activities and plan to do it today or over this weekend. It may take five minutes or five hours, it might be important or trivial, it might involve others or it could be by yourself.

It is only important that it should be something that puts you back in touch with a part of your life that you had forgotten — a part of you that you may have been telling yourself was lost somehow, that you could not get back to. Don’t wait until you feel like doing it; do it anyway and see what happens. It’s time to reclaim your life!

Day 10: Go to the movies

Ask a friend or family member to go with you to the movies — but this time, with a difference. Go at a set time (say 7 p.m.) and choose whatever film takes your fancy only when you get there. Often, what makes us happiest in life is the unexpected — the chance encounter or the unpredicted event. Movies are great for all these.

Before you go, notice any thoughts that may arise such as, ‘I haven’t got time for pleasure’, or, ‘What if there is nothing on that I’ll enjoy?’

They undermine your enthusiasm for taking action and discourage your intention to do something that might nourish your life in important ways. Once you’re inside the cinema, just forget about all this and be consumed by the film.

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