French explorer, spiritualist, Buddhist, Taoist, anarchist, and writer
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Alexandra David-Neel est une exploratrice, écrivaine et orientaliste hors du commun, connue pour avoir été la première femme occidentale à pénétrer clandestinement dans la cité interdite de Lhassa, au Tibet, en 1924. À 48 ans, déterminée et déguisée, elle brave les interdictions pour suivre sa quête spirituelle bouddhiste. Accompagnée de Yongden, son fidèle compagnon et futur fils adoptif, elle arpente les montagnes de l'Himalaya à la recherche d'illumination et de vérité intérieure. Rebelle dès l'enfance, cantatrice devenue féministe, anarchiste et intellectuelle, elle défie les conventions sociales de son époque. Son voyage, périlleux et transformateur, la mènera de l'Inde à la Chine en passant par la Mongolie, pour finalement accomplir l'un des exploits les plus marquants du XXe siècle. De retour en France, elle partage ses récits et devient une figure emblématique de la spiritualité et de l'émancipation féminine. Elle vivra jusqu'à 100 ans, fidèle à elle-même : libre, érudite, insoumise. Merci pour votre écoute Vous aimez l'Heure H, mais connaissez-vous La Mini Heure H https://audmns.com/YagLLiK , une version pour toute la famille.Retrouvez l'ensemble des épisodes de l'Heure H sur notre plateforme Auvio.be :https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/22750 Intéressés par l'histoire ? Vous pourriez également aimer nos autres podcasts : Un jour dans l'Histoire : https://audmns.com/gXJWXoQL'Histoire Continue: https://audmns.com/kSbpELwAinsi que nos séries historiques :Chili, le Pays de mes Histoires : https://audmns.com/XHbnevhD-Day : https://audmns.com/JWRdPYIJoséphine Baker : https://audmns.com/wCfhoEwLa folle histoire de l'aviation : https://audmns.com/xAWjyWCLes Jeux Olympiques, l'étonnant miroir de notre Histoire : https://audmns.com/ZEIihzZMarguerite, la Voix d'une Résistante : https://audmns.com/zFDehnENapoléon, le crépuscule de l'Aigle : https://audmns.com/DcdnIUnUn Jour dans le Sport : https://audmns.com/xXlkHMHSous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppvVous aimez les histoires racontées par Jean-Louis Lahaye ? Connaissez-vous ces podcast?Sous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppv36 Quai des orfèvres : https://audmns.com/eUxNxyFHistoire Criminelle, les enquêtes de Scotland Yard : https://audmns.com/ZuEwXVOUn Crime, une Histoire https://audmns.com/NIhhXpYN'oubliez pas de vous y abonner pour ne rien manquer.Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Iain is joined by adventurer Elise Wortley. In the last 7 years, Elise has taken on some hugely challenging projects to highlight some of the original – and largely forgotten - female mountaineers and explorers. What makes her ‘Woman With Altitude' project unique is that she has climbed and trekked in places such as the Himalayas, the Alps and the Cairngorms using the same equipment and clothing that was available to her female predecessors at the time. We discuss what it's like trying to summit Mt Blanc in hobnail boots, how you source a wooden-framed backpack and the challenges of hiking in woollen knickerbockers. Elise also featured in the Channel 4 programme ‘Alone' where she spend over a month in the Canadian wilderness completely alone. Discount Code for Intersport Ski Hire If you are heading to the snow then don't forget that you can save money when you book your ski hire at intersportrent.com and use the code ‘SKIPODCAST' You'll get a guaranteed discount for ski hire in France, Austria and Switzerland and to make it even simpler you don't even need to use the code, just take this link and your basket will automatically be reduced. SHOW NOTES Listen to Iain's previous interviews with: · BBC Ski Sunday presenter Chemmy Alcott · GB Snowsport CEO, Vicky Gosling · Former Erna Low MD Joanna Yellowlees-Bound · Team GB freestyle skier, Zoe Atkin Inghams are celebrating their 90th anniversary this winter (2:45) Take a look at Elise's website ‘Woman With Altitude' (3:30) Elise was inspired by Alexandra David-Neel's book ‘My Journey to Lhasa' (4:00) Nan Sheperd wrote ‘The Living Mountain' after hiking in the Cairngorms (11:30) Find out more about Iain's ski touring trip to Ben Lawers in Scotland (15:15) Find out more about Elise's Scottish adventure (15:30) Jane Inglis-Clarke founded the Ladies' Scottish Climbing Club in 1908 (17:00) Henriette d'Angeville was the first woman to climb Mont Blanc solo (17:30) Look out for Henriette on the mural in the centre of Chamonix (18:15) Elise's hobnail boots were supplied by shoe specialists Trickers (20:15) Dorothy Pilley wrote the book ‘Climbing Days' and was the co-founder of the Pinnacle Club (24:00) Elise travelled from Bastia to Monte Cinto in Corsica in February 2025 (24:30) Watch the Channel 4 series ‘Alone' (26:15) [Spoiler] Elise came second after spending 34 days in the Canadian wilderness (32:00) Elise will be returning to Chamonix in June 2025 to try and complete her recreation of Henriette d'Angeville's historic climb (33:00) Hotelplan are funding Elise's 2025 attempt on Mont Blanc (34:15) Only 2% of mountain guides are women (35:30) FEEDBACK (37:00) I enjoy all feedback about the show, I'm always interested to hear what you think, so if you enjoyed this episode, please do let me know on social @theskipodcast or by email theskipodcast@gmail.com We've had a couple of items of feedback since the last podcast: Emma Budget: “Fantastic podcast! My husband and I have been listening religiously since before Covid. Now that we're taking our first holidays as a young family, it's been so useful picking up tips and tricks from your episodes about skiing with kids! It's unbelievably rewarding skiing the slopes for the first time with them. Thanks for the podcast, we love it!” Ian Simpson: "Great podcast. Gives me so many travelling ideas especially by train. Any chance you could do one exploring by motorhome? Small community type resorts working together for the van people who like exploring the mountains in Europe." [Try this episode, Ian] There are now 253 episodes of The Ski Podcast to catch up with and 166 of those were listened to in the last week. If you've enjoyed this episode, why not to go theskipodcast.com and take a look around the tags and categories – you're bound to find something of interest. If you like the podcast, there are three things you can do to help: 1) Follow us. Just take a look for that button and press it now 2) Give us a review or just leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 3) Book your ski hire with Intersport Rent using the code ‘SKIPODCAST' or take this link You can follow Iain @skipedia and the podcast @theskipodcast. You can also follow us on WhatsApp for exclusive material released ahead of the podcast.
En este nuevo episodio, Cristina Bernat nos cuenta la historia de Alexandra David Neel y sus hazañas. Entrevistamos a la montañera María Ciudad, que tiene una historia de enfermedad y superación de esas que inspiran. Y también nos acompaña Jordi Corominas, una de las grandes leyendas de nuestro alpinismo. Podcast Oxígeno, con Elena Moro y Jorge Jiménez Ríos.
When she was 16, Lise Wortley read a book by the explorer Alexandra David-Neel, who had undertaken a 14-year journey through Asia. The idea of it stayed with her until ten years later, when she was searching for a way to improve her mental health. It dawned on her that David-Neel and other female adventurers like Nan Shepherd and Henriette D'Angeville, were far less well-known than their male counterparts. She set out to change that, by the incredible method of recreating their journeys, in the clothing they wore at the time. Join Lise now in the Cairngorms, to hear her stories of spending a month walking in the tweeds and poncho tent that Nan shepherd wore, travelling in David-Neel's yak wool coat and preparing for an ascent of Mont Blanc in Henriette D'angeville's tiny shoes. Lise is an ambassador for Passenger Clothing a responsible outdoor clothing brand with a mission to inspire meaningful escapism. This summer we've been working with them on a few different exciting projects including a series of videos with some of this season's podcast guests. We've also teamed up to create a pop-up holiday bus in the Lake District. Thank you to them for sponsoring this podcast episode. https://www.passenger-clothing.com/ https://www.canopyandstars.co.uk/britain/england/cumbria/hinterlandes/little-firs-from-passenger https://www.instagram.com/woman_with_altitude/ A Life More Wild is an 18Sixty production, brought to you by Canopy & Stars. Production by Clarissa Maycock. Our theme music is by Billie Marten.
L'émission 28 Minutes du 18/07/2024 L'écrivain-voyageur Olivier Weber déclare sa flamme aux aventuriers “L'aventure est un état d'esprit. C'est une attitude qui mêle plusieurs éléments : le goût du risque, l'attrait de l'inconnu, la sortie de la zone de confort et l'envie d'aller voir les autres.” Olivier Weber appartient à la lignée de ceux qui parcourent le monde, ses réalités et ses conflits, pour en ramener des récits. Écrivain-voyageur, journaliste, un temps diplomate, il a couvert la quasi-totalité des guerres contemporaines : de l'Afghanistan au Kosovo, du Cachemire à l'Irak, du Soudan à l'Ukraine. Auteur d'une trentaine d'ouvrages, on lui doit notamment le "Dictionnaire amoureux de Joseph Kessel", son idole. C'est avec un autre dictionnaire amoureux, consacré cette fois à sa passion de l'aventure, qu'il revient aujourd'hui. Cervantès, Lawrence d'Arabie, Indiana Jones, Friedrich Nietzsche ou encore Bertrand Piccard sont quelques-uns des personnages auxquels il rend hommage. Un vestiaire très masculin, duquel émergent quelques rares femmes aventurières comme Gertrude Bell ou Alexandra David-Neel. Oliver Weber est notre invité. La crise politique va-t-elle mettre à terre la Ve République ? Depuis son avènement, en 1958, la Ve République a résisté à moult tempêtes. Mais saura-t-elle surmonter la crise provoquée par la décision d'Emmanuel Macron de dissoudre l'Assemblée nationale le 9 juin dernier ? Le fonctionnement institutionnel du pays est-il toujours en phase avec ses réalités politiques ? Si la question n'est pas nouvelle, elle est exacerbée en ce début d'été : au lendemain des élections législatives, le paysage politique apparaît morcelé et les blocs politiques qui se dessinent à l'Assemblée ne semblent pas, pour le moment, capables de former une coalition majoritaire. L'absence de majorité absolue complique considérablement l'exercice du pouvoir et renvoie au spectre de la IVe République, célèbre pour son instabilité chronique. L'ombre de la paralysie politique plane : l'Assemblée nationale ne peut plus être dissoute pendant un an et le(s) gouvernement(s) nommé(s) durant ce délai risquent d'être renversés, car minoritaires. En parallèle, tous les regards sont déjà tournés vers l'élection présidentielle de 2027. Alors que la Constitution et l'élection du président de la République au suffrage universel direct confère à celui-ci un pouvoir politique disproportionné par rapport aux autres démocraties parlementaires, n'est-ce pas le moment de changer les règles du jeu ? Quitte à réformer la constitution, voire à passer à une VIe République ? On en débat. Enfin, retrouvez également les chroniques de Marjorie Adelson et Justin Morin ! 28 Minutes est le magazine d'actualité d'ARTE, présenté par Elisabeth Quin du lundi au jeudi à 20h05. Renaud Dély est aux commandes de l'émission le vendredi et le samedi. Ce podcast est coproduit par KM et ARTE Radio. Enregistrement : 18 juillet 2024 - Présentation : Jean-Mathieu Pernin - Production : KM, ARTE Radio
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! VII Esta noche, nos adentramos en un tema fascinante y enigmático: el mundo de los dobles y la bilocación. Fenómenos que han cautivado la imaginación humana durante siglos, desafiando nuestra comprensión de la realidad y abriendo las puertas a un universo de posibilidades extraordinarias. Comenzaremos nuestro viaje explorando las experiencias de algunos escritores célebres que tuvieron vivencias relacionadas con sus dobles. Figuras como Edgar Allan Poe, Fyodor Dostoievski y Mark Twain. La idea de que podemos tener un "doble", una especie de reflejo o duplicado de nosotros mismos, ha inspirado innumerables historias, mitos y leyendas. Desde el Doppelgänger de la mitología alemana hasta la figura del "otro yo" que existe en algún lugar del planeta… tal vez en otro país. En algunos países, esto es presagio de muerte. Y no falta razón, por algunas crónicas que se han contado… cuando esto ha ocurrido… al parecer, los testigos, al poco tiempo, han fallecido. Existen diversas teorías sobre la bilocación. Algunos la interpretan como un fenómeno espiritual o religioso, mientras que otros la exploran desde un enfoque científico, buscando explicaciones en la física cuántica o la parapsicología. Y aunque algunos de los más famosos involucran a figuras religiosas como San Alfonso María de Liguori o Santa Teresa de Ávila, hoy vamos a ver que no siempre ha sido así. Algunos lo explican con "viajes astrales". El Padre Pío de Pietrelcina, el famoso y controvertido monje capuchino, es solo uno de esos ejemplos. Uno de los casos más famosos es la historia es el de Emélie Sagée. Autores como Plauto, Hoffmann, Robert Louis Stevenson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hans Christian Andersen, Edgar Allan Poe, Fyodor Dostoievski, Christina Rossetti, Alfred de Musset, William Butler Yeats, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, entre muchos otros, han plasmado en sus obras el motivo del doppelgänger, ese doble fantasmal. Un personaje físico idéntico al protagonista, como en "El extraño caso del Dr. Jekyll y Mr. Hyde" de Stevenson. Un reflejo en el espejo que cobra vida propia, como en "El retrato de Dorian Gray" de Oscar Wilde. Una presencia fantasmal que atormenta al protagonista, como en "William Wilson" de Edgar Allan Poe. Un símbolo de la conciencia dividida o de la locura, como en "El doble" de Fyodor Dostoievski. Figuras como Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Fyodor Dostoievski A põe, una de estas experiencias, lo llevó a escribir un poema titulado "Ulalume", donde describe la visión de una mujer similar a su fallecida prometida. "William Wilson": En este relato, un hombre se encuentra con su doppelgänger, quien representa su lado oscuro y lo conduce a la destrucción. "El sistema del doctor Tarr y el profesor Feather": Esta historia explora la locura y la dualidad del ser humano a través de un experimento que involucra la división de la personalidad. "El pozo y el péndulo": En este relato de terror gótico, el protagonista se enfrenta a sus propios demonios internos en un ambiente claustrofóbico y opresivo. Personajes famosos que tuvieron casos similares son: Lord Byron, Maupassant, Anton Chejov, Percy B. Shelley, esposo de Mary Shelley, El poeta John Donne, San Francisco de Asís, San Martín de Porres, el Padre Pío. Pero si hay un caso excepcional, es el de Sor María de Ágreda, vida que inspiraría la obra de Javier Sierra, La Dama Azul. El Padre Eduardo Rodríguez. Viajaremos también al Tíbet para saber como se forma y qué son los Tulpas y lo que le pasó a Alexandra David-Neel . Para los chamanes, el sueño no es un mero estado de descanso, sino un portal hacia un universo paralelo donde reside su doble, un ser energético que refleja su esencia más profunda. A este proceso de acceso consciente al mundo onírico lo denominan “ensoñación". Otros famosos fueron: Caspar David Friedrich, el célebre pintor romántico alemán. Van Gogh. Mary Todd Lincoln, la esposa del presidente Lincoln. Catalina la Grande, la emperatriz de Rusia. Humberto I, rey de Italia. Sir Walter Scott: Novelista, poeta e historiador escocés. Alexandre Dumas: Escritor francés. Hans Christian Andersen: Escritor danés. Abraham Lincoln: Presidente estadounidense. Nicolás Gogol: Escritor ruso. Emma Hardinge Britten… escritora, y médium inglesa. Giuseppe Garibaldi: General y político italiano. Franz Liszt: Compositor y pianista húngaro. Oscar Wilde: Dramaturgo, novelista y poeta irlandés. Thomas Edison: Inventor estadounidense. Marie Curie: Física y química polaco-naturalizada francesa. Albert Einstein: Físico. HAZTE MECENAS, no dejes que La Biblioteca, cierre Nunca sus Puertas… GRATITUD ESPECIAL: Siempre a los MECENAS. Sin ustedes… esto no tendría sentido. SUSCRIBETE AL CANAL DE TELEGRAM: https://t.me/LaLamadaDeLaLuna PUEDES VER ALGUNOS VIDEOS DE LLDLL: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEOtdbbriLqUfBtjs_wtEHw Suscríbete al Canal Youtube y a Ivoox. Sigamos sumando en LLDLL, SUSCRIBETE en IVOOX y comparte. Y si deseas escuchar todos los programas en cerrados y sin anuncios… Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Dans ce nouvel épisode du podcast Impermanent, j'ai rencontré Jeanne Mascolo de Filippis. Grande voyageuse diplômée des Langues O', Jeanne Mascolo de Filippis a organisé et encadré de nombreux circuits de randonnées dans les Himalayas, du Pakistan au Tibet, en passant par l'Inde, le Népal et le Bhoutan. Son parcours l'a amené à réaliser son premier documentaire, « Alexandra David-Neel, du Sikkim au Tibet interdit », sorti en 1992, qui a reçu de nombreux prix internationaux.Nous avons notamment discuté de son premier voyage marquant, qui aura influencé le reste de sa vie, de l'équilibre à trouver entre une carrière de documentariste et la maternité, et du rythme du temps qui évolue au fil des années.Merci infiniment à Jeanne pour cette discussion si inspirante.On se retrouve sur Instagram @leonieragot @impermanentpodcastMusique @labrigade._ Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
durée : 01:04:59 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit - En 1954, Alexandra David-Néel raconte son voyage au Tibet sur les ondes de la Chaîne Nationale dans une série en neuf épisodes. Dans le septième et huitième entretien, il est question du bouddhisme et des phénomènes singuliers, surnaturels qui se produisent au Tibet. - invités : Alexandra David-Néel Orientaliste, écrivaine et exploratrice
Inspired by the Yoga Sutras, Pandit Rajmani Tigunait, Duncan Trussell, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, Ragu Markus, Alexandra David-Neel, MC Arthur, Ellie Anne, Maya Angelous, and Ram Dass. Two great quotes from this episode: "And if you find yourself in that Samadhi, that higher state of absorption, material things may appear to collapse as the sign of our souls connection with spiritual fortune." "Practitioners, recognize that the most challenging aspects of life, the energies and play of confused emotions and frightening obstacles can be worked with as gateways to freedom and realization." Audiobook. Mature listeners only (18+).
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 995, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: 4 Years 1: In 1960 Abebe Bikila won this Olympic event barefoot; 4 years later he won it again, this time wearing shoes. Marathon. 2: He was the first U.S. president to serve just 4 years. John Adams. 3: His book "Daisy-Head Maysie" was published in 1995, 4 years after his death. Dr. Seuss. 4: Every 4 years the Boy Scouts hold international rallies known as these. Jamborees. 5: In Julius Caesar's time this month had 30 days once every 4 years. February. Round 2. Category: Discographies 1: "Sonic Highways":This Dave Grohl band. the Foo Fighters. 2: "Private Dancer":This woman who can really move in high heels. Tina Turner. 3: "It's the Girls!":This divine singer. Bette Midler. 4: "Houses of the Holy":These rockers. Led Zeppelin. 5: "In the Lonely Hour":This neo-soul singer. Sam Smith. Round 3. Category: The Bronze Age 1: Oliver Stone has one of these medals first created by executive order on February 4, 1944. Bronze Star. 2: Gymnast and native son Dimitrios Loundras was only 10 years old when he won a bronze in this city in 1896. Athens. 3: Pulp hero Doc who was "The Man of Bronze". Doc Savage. 4: In men's Olympic basketball, this Baltic team won bronze in 1992, 1996 and 2000. Lithuania. 5: On the medal stand, 200-meter bronze medalist John Carlos raised his fist in a black power salute in this year. 1968. Round 4. Category: One Of The 8 Planets 1: Also a chemical element. Mercury. 2: She's a tennis superstar. Venus. 3: Popular chocolate bar made in England since 1933. Mars. 4: Lighthouse city near Palm Beach, Florida. Jupiter. 5: Husband to Gaea and father of the Titans. Uranus. Round 5. Category: In Disguise 1: In the Perrault version, she's eaten by the wolf who's disguised as her grandmother. Little Red Riding Hood. 2: In 1924 Alexandra David-Neel disguised herself as a beggar to sneak into this capital of Tibet. Lhasa. 3: Some reports say this PLO head sometimes disguised himself as a woman in order to flee his enemies. Yasser Arafat. 4: According to the myth, his beggar disguise was so good, it even fooled his wife Penelope. Odysseus. 5: When Nathan Hale was captured in September 1776, he was disguised as one of these. Schoolteacher. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
Grande viaggiatrice, studiosa dell'Oriente e delle sue religioni, prima donna a essersi avventurata fino alla città di Lhasa in Tibet, Alexandra David-Néel è una donna curiosa e instancabile, dapprima cantante lirica, poi esploratrice e infine persino monaca tibetana. Di idee anarchiche, femminista, animata da uno spirito libero e inquieto, si avvicina al buddismo da giovane e segue un lungo percorso per approfondire la dottrina. Viaggia in India, Cina e Giappone, sempre accompagnata da un giovane monaco che le fa da assistente e che lei adotta. Tiene conferenze e scrive libri sui suoi viaggi e sul buddismo, contribuendo così ad avvicinare l'Oriente e la sua cultura al mondo occidentale. Biografia di ALEXANDRA DAVID NEEL, scritta e letta da Carmen Laterza Tratta da Donne Intrepide vol. 7 – Esploratrici & Viaggiatrici Music from Uppbeat License code: HWIJMAQJUEUSKPUU Scopri tutti i libri e podcast di LIBROZA
On this episode of Anomalous Waves, Ami starts out with some very spooky haunted grocery store tales. Jon follows up with another strange character from the late 1800's, this time with Alexandra David Neel and her experiences with Tulpa's in Tibet. We end the episode with another tale from the liminal.earth map, using the "Random Story" function. Send your strange tales to anomalouswaves@gmail.com and have your story featured! For all the links to support the show, go to anomalouswaves.com Join The Strange Pals Club on Patreon! Follow us: @anomalouswaves *Cover Collaboration with Jen Stephens* Jon: Host & Sound Design// jonmcedward.com Amalia: Host// anomalous_ami Lilliput: Pawducer// lilli.puts Jon's Links UFO by Jim Sullivan Magic and Mystery in Tibet by Alexandra David Neel
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/biography
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/buddhist-studies
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/french-studies
I grew up with Alexandra David-Neel's books on my mum's bookshelf. She was part of the myth making process that led to my own fascination with Tibet, as something real, and as fantasy, a description that is often used to define Neel's relationship and presentation of Tibet. She was either a key that helped open the door into the world of Tibet with its Lamas, Vajrayana Buddhism, and enormous mountains and planes, or another in the long line of westerners who turned Tibet into a romantic, western fantasy. In this episode, I talk to Diane Harke, author of Incognito: The Astounding Life of Alexandra David-Neel (Sumeru Press, 2016). We look back at David-Neel, her life, and Tibet. She was also a life-long anarchist, feminist, explorer, and prolific author. We discuss her encounters with the 13th Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama and her legacy in creating an image of Tibet and Buddhism that enticed the likes of Alan Watts and Gary Snyder to venture Eastwards. Matthew O'Connell is a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Seriah is again joined by author and paranormal researcher Travis Watson for the second half of their discussion. Topics include sea monsters, tulpas, sea serpents in mythology, thought forms materialized by psychic energy, Alexandra David-Neel, Walter B. Gibson, a plantation ghost apparently created by belief, a psychic trauma miasma, water monsters and cold still water, relic dinosaurs, the Philip experiment, dreams, magickal practice, John Michael Greer, merfolk, an encounter between a French explorer and a mermaid, storms, John Warms, the strange ethnicity of mermaids, the folly of manatees being confused with merfolk, bizarre completely white humanoid entities, an encounter with a “fear zone”, legend tripping, Lon Strickler, a witness terrified by a tall emaciated white humanoid, the Wendigo, paranormal encounters as psychic experiences, ghost trains, Frank Edwards, phantom carriages arriving for the dead, Joshua Cutchin and the wild hunt, repeated apparitions of trains, the month of December and the dead, Linda Godfrey, Scottish Fae lore brought to Canada, broadcaster Christian Page's bizarre abduction by unknown entities, the paranormal as a theatric presentation, initiation and fear, the Fae placing trees in people's way, Joshua Cutchin and Fae on the march, youths encounter with fog and a strange man and missing time, people mysteriously transported to other continents, the “King Hall's AM” podcast, J. Allen Hyneck, a detailed report of a bizarre sphere by an astronomer, intelligent plasma, Timothy Renner, strange lights and Sasquatch, anomalous lights and numerous phenomena, angels, Janet and Colin Bord, several children encounter weird humanoids mooing like cows, Susan Michaels, a UFO appearing over a hotel in downtown Montreal with numerous witnesses, unexplained slime falls on a school for three days in a row, skyfalls including a rain of frogs, black dog encounters, and much more! Travis provides a plethora of fascinating stories and the discussion is riveting!s
Seriah is again joined by author and paranormal researcher Travis Watson for the second half of their discussion. Topics include sea monsters, tulpas, sea serpents in mythology, thought forms materialized by psychic energy, Alexandra David-Neel, Walter B. Gibson, a plantation ghost apparently created by belief, a psychic trauma miasma, water monsters and cold still water, relic dinosaurs, the Philip experiment, dreams, magickal practice, John Michael Greer, merfolk, an encounter between a French explorer and a mermaid, storms, John Warms, the strange ethnicity of mermaids, the folly of manatees being confused with merfolk, bizarre completely white humanoid entities, an encounter with a “fear zone”, legend tripping, Lon Strickler, a witness terrified by a tall emaciated white humanoid, the Wendigo, paranormal encounters as psychic experiences, ghost trains, Frank Edwards, phantom carriages arriving for the dead, Joshua Cutchin and the wild hunt, repeated apparitions of trains, the month of December and the dead, Linda Godfrey, Scottish Fae lore brought to Canada, broadcaster Christian Page's bizarre abduction by unknown entities, the paranormal as a theatric presentation, initiation and fear, the Fae placing trees in people's way, Joshua Cutchin and Fae on the march, youths encounter with fog and a strange man and missing time, people mysteriously transported to other continents, the “King Hall's AM” podcast, J. Allen Hyneck, a detailed report of a bizarre sphere by an astronomer, intelligent plasma, Timothy Renner, strange lights and Sasquatch, anomalous lights and numerous phenomena, angels, Janet and Colin Bord, several children encounter weird humanoids mooing like cows, Susan Michaels, a UFO appearing over a hotel in downtown Montreal with numerous witnesses, unexplained slime falls on a school for three days in a row, skyfalls including a rain of frogs, black dog encounters, and much more! Travis provides a plethora of fascinating stories and the discussion is riveting! - Recap by Vincent Treewell of The Weird Part Podcast Outro Music is Andra Dare with Lillith Download
“Travel is often one part geography and nine parts imagination.” –Kate Harris In this episode of Deviate Rolf and Kate discuss how travel can transform one's idea of what "exploration" is (3:00); the concept of borders (14:00); nostalgia and the transformational effect of travel (25:00); the role of home in relation to travel (34:00); and letting adventure into your life (44:00). Kate Harris (@kateonmars) is an adventure writer, named by Condé Nast Traveler as one of the “world's most adventurous women.” Her work has appeared in Outside, The Walrus, and Georgia Review. Her book, Lands of Lost Borders, is a national bestseller For more about Kate, check out www.kateharris.ca Notable Links: Rolf's Q&A with Kate Harris (book foreword) Silk Road (network of trade routes) Ernest Shackleton (explorer) Fridtjof Nansen (explorer) Annie Dillard (American author) Wind, Sand and Stars, by Antoine de Saint-Exupery (book) Henry David Thoreau (writer) My Journey to Lhasa, by Alexandra David-Neel (book) Aksai Chin (region administered by China) Marco Polo (historical figure) Tomas Tranströmer (poet) Atlin (community in British Columbia) The Deviate theme music comes from the title track of Cedar Van Tassel's 2017 album Lumber. Note: We don't host a “comments” section, but we're happy to hear your questions and insights via email, at deviate@rolfpotts.com.
Dans le 139e épisode du podcast Le bulleur, on vous présente Hoka hey !, album que l'on doit à Neyef, édité chez Rue de Sèvres sous le label 619. Cette semaine aussi, on revient sur l'actualité de la bande dessinée et des sorties avec : - La sortie de l'album Saison brune 2.0 que l'on doit à Philippe Squarzoni et aux éditions Delcourt dans sa collection Encrages - La sortie du troisième tome de Saint-Elme, série que l'on doit au scénario de Serge Lehman, au dessin de Frederik Peeters, un tome baptisé Le porteur de mauvaises nouvelle et qui est édité chez Delcourt - La sortie du deuxième et dernier tome de Noir burlesque que l'on doit à Enrico Marini et aux éditions Dargaud - La sortie du sixième et dernier tome de la série Mattéo, la superbe fresque historique de Jean-Pierre Gibrat éditée chez Futuropolis - La sortie du troisième tome d'Un putain de salopard, un tome baptisé Guajeraï pour une série que l'on doit au scénario de Régis Loisel, au dessin d'Olivier Pont et c'est édité chez Rue de Sèvres - La sortie de l'intégrale du premier cycle de la série Une vie avec Alexandra David-Neel que l'on doit au scénario de Fred Campoy qui signe aussi le dessin conjointement avec Mathieu Blanchot et le tout est édité chez Grand angle
Join Traci and Kurt as we review Cartaventura: Lhasa, a storytelling game to find Alexandra David-Neel by Thomas Dupont and Arnaud Ladagnous, published by Kosmos. https://mfgcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Episode_404_Final.mp3
The first attempt on Everest took place in 1922 by a British team led by George Leigh Mallory. What happened is an extraordinary story full of controversy, drama, and incident, populated by a set of larger-than-life characters straight out of an adventure novel. I spoke with Mick Conefrey about this story. Bio: For thirty years I've made documentaries for the BBC and all the major British and US channels. I've been everywhere from the Arctic to the Himalayas to Angkor Wat and written books on mountaineering and exploration. I've been lucky to have been able to film all over over the world from Cambodia to K2, from Puerto Rico to Spitsbergen. I'm particularly interested in films about exploration and mountaineering, and have filmed in the Alps, the Himalayas and Alaska. Several of my films have won international and British awards, at festivals such as Trento, Telluride, Banff and Kendal. As both a film maker and a writer, I'm fascinated by the art of narrative. I love to find good stories with complex characters dealing with even more complex situations. My definition of good drama is what happens when people are put under pressure, and exploration and mountaineering provide plenty examples of this. My heroes: John Hunt, Graham Greene, Robert Siodmak, Tom Woolfe, Alexandra David Neel, Tom Wolfe, Orson Welles, Ella Maillart, Sir Richard Burton, John Banville, Don Cherry, Lucinda Williams. My current squeezes: Jeanette Winterson, Bobby Womack, Jo Nesbo, Carla Bley. Website - https://www.mickconefrey.co.uk/ Book - https://www.mickconefrey.co.uk/books/everest-1953 Artwork by Phillip Thor - https://linktr.ee/Philipthor_art To watch the visuals with the trailer go to https://www.podcasttheway.com/trailers/ The Way Podcast - www.PodcastTheWay.com - Follow at Twitter / Instagram - @podcasttheway (Subscribe/Follow on streaming platforms and social media!) Thank you Don Grant for the Intro/Outro. Check out his podcast - https://threeinterestingthings.captivate.fm Intro guitar copied from Aiden Ayers at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7UiB9FMOP5s *The views demonstrated in this show are strictly those of The Way Podcast/Radio Show*
Elise Wortley (Adventurer)On today's Podcast, we have Elise Wortley. Elise Wortley is an explorer and is going out, recreating the adventures of past explorers. Last year, we had her on the podcast talking about her incredible trip out in the Himalayas recreating the Alexandra David Neel expedition. This time, we are heading to Iran to recreate Freya Stark's The Valleys of the Assassins expedition.Review the Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-modern-adventurer-podcast/id1535779210Today on the podcast, we talk about her story and about the issues she faced while travelling in Iran.Enjoyed the Show? Tag me @johnhorsfall on InstagramJoin the Adventure - https://mailchi.mp/44c55725379d/newsletter-page-ziba-adventuresElise's WebsiteElise's InstagramSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-modern-adventurer/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
You have tuned your mental radio to a very particular frequency and entered a phantasmagorical zone, one in which you mustn't take things too literally, but you must also be sure to take them seriously. It's time for Clairaudience, with Ersa Lowly. Tonight, we hear from a 1-877-WASTOIDS caller who shares a story about their imaginary friend, and then turn to the work of esotericist Alexandra David-Neel on the topic of "tulpas"—imaginary beings come to life—for some answers. Clairaudience is made for you by WASTOIDS, audio and video from Hello Merch. Home to music podcasts, live performance videos, art, and other strange stuff, you can call us at any time by dialing 1-877-WASTOIDS. Leave a message and listen for it on the show.
Elise Wortley is an Englishwoman on a mission; not as a modern day explorer but as an authentic amazon from centuries past. Elise is planning her third journey following in the footsteps of famous women who conquered mountains and oceans from Scotland to the Himlayas. And what makes her journeys different is that she is dressed and equipped in authentic clothing of that period which so far has been the early 1900s. This includes heavy long woolen coats, leather shoes and a wooden backpack; none of which makes for easy going across difficult terrain and in challenging weather conditions. And there's also altitude sickness to cope with too. But none of these adversities have deterred Elise who was first inspired by reading about Alexandra David-Neel who climbed the Himalayas and Nan Shepherd who explored The Cairngorm Mountains in Scotland. Her next adventure begins in April 2022 when she travels to Iran to retrace the exploits of Freya Stark on her incredible journey to the Valleys of the Assassins. While all these women made history in their time, Elise is also making history of her own inspired by her sheroes.Host: Chris StaffordRecorded: March 3, 2022For more information, links and resources and hundreds more conversations from the world of women's sport including articles, blogs, videos and podcasts visit wispsports.com. WiSP Sports is the ONLY GLOBAL PODCAST FOR WOMEN'S SPORT with more than 60 hosts, 1600+ episodes across 50 shows and over 7 million downloads. Every episode is a WiSP SPORTS ORIGINAL PRODUCTION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.We are ranked in the top 2% of more than 2.71 million podcasts worldwide. WiSP Sports is on all major podcast players. Follow WiSP Sports on social media @WiSPsports. Contact us at info@wispsports.com.
Allison Jornlin returns to tell about the incredible Alexandra David-Neel, the first Western woman to see Tibet, and the person who brought the concept of a "tulpa" to Western attention.
Letha Hadady is one of the nation's leading experts on natural Chinese remedies and author of books on health and beauty. She has lead stress management workshops and acted as natural product consultant for Sony Entertainment Inc., Dreyfus, Ogilvy & Mather, and Consumer Eyes, Inc. in New York.In 1980 Letha became involved with novelist Michael Foster and librarian and poet Barbara Foster in a work-oriented menage a trois of writers. Together they researched and the Fosters wrote two biographies of Alexandra David-Neel: Forbidden Journey and The Secret Lives of Alexandra David-Neel. Their book Three in Love: Menages a Trois from Ancient to Modern Times has been called "racy and engaging" by Entertainment Weekly. The three have been featured in television and radio interviews and a European documentary "Menage a Trois" in 2008 by Catherina Klusemann. She has also authored "Tea for Three: The Other Woman by Letha Hadady", as well as co-authored "Outlaws of Love: A History of Forbidden Desire". Please be sure to check out her website for more info at: www.asianhealthsecrets.com.
Synopsis The American composer, singer, dancer, and choreographer Meredith Monk was born in New York City on today's date in 1942. Monk attended Sarah Lawrence College, where she studied theatre, dance, and music. On graduation in 1964, she began performing pieces that combined gesture and movement with vocal and visual elements. Around that time, a number of contemporary composers had begun stretching the boundaries of instrumental music, but, as Monk recalls, there really wasn't much happening regarding extended vocal techniques. Monk began testing how she could stretch the range, timbre and character of her own singing, inventing a vocabulary based on her particular voice – as she explains it, just as a dancer would develop a vocabulary of movement particular to their body. Considering her long-standing interest in integrating music with movement and visuals, opera seemed a natural outlet for Monk's talents, and in 1993 she premiered a full-length opera entitled “Atlas.” “Atlas” was inspired by the life of Alexandra David-Neel, a scientist who was the first Western woman to travel in Tibet. It seemed a natural choice for Monk, for whom exploration and curiosity are so important. “If I knew what I was looking for,” says Monk “it wouldn't be that interesting. Music Played in Today's Program Meredith Monk (b. 1942) — Atlas (Meredith Monk Ensemble; Wayne Hankin, cond.) ECM 1491
Photo: Couverture du livre Alexandra David-Neel de Jeanne Mascolo
En 1924, Alexandra David-Neel, exploratrice, tibétologue, et bouddhiste, est la première occidentale à pénétrer secrètement dans la cité interdite de Lhassa. Cʹest à lʹadolescence que Jeanne Mascolo de Filippis, grande voyageuse, amoureuse de lʹHimalaya et réalisatrice de documentaires télé découvre par hasard Alexandra David-Néel en lisant son récit ʹʹVoyage dʹune parisienne à Lhassaʹʹ. Depuis, elle a marché sur ses traces, elle lui a consacré son premier film - sorti en 1993, année où il a remporté de nombreux prix - et une biographie parue aux éditions Paulsen : ʹʹAlexandra David-Néel, 100 ans dʹaventureʹʹ. Interview: Muriel Mérat (1e diffusion le 30.01.2019) Réalisation: Jean-Daniel Mottet Production: Muriel Mérat & Christophe Canut Photo: Jeanne Mascolo de Filippis
Alexandra David Neel - Incontri con Sri Aurobindo by KAPPA RADIO by Yoga Network --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/radiovrinda/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/radiovrinda/support
Alexandra David Neel fue la primera occidental en llegar a la capital de Tíbet y además la primera mujer occidental en ser recibida por el Dalai Lama. Una vida apasionante. Espero que disfrutes de este sexto, y último, episodio de la primera temporada. Tienes más información sobre Alexandra David Neel en: https://caminosalvaje.org/2021/06/25/alexandra-david-neel-primera-occidental-tibet/ Puedes encontrar más sobre el podcast en: https://caminosalvaje.org/con-faldas-y-a-viajar/ Todo lo que hago en: https://caminosalvaje.org Recuerda suscribirte y darle me gusta, al corazón o escribir una reseña en Apple Podcast, me ayuda muchísimo a que este podcast pueda llegar a más gente. Gracias por escucharme.
Gần 100 năm kể từ ngày ra mắt, Mystyquet et Magiciens du Tibet, cuốn sách vang dội châu Âu của nữ tác giả người Pháp Alexandra David – Neel, mới có dịp đến tay bạn đọc Việt Nam với tên gọi Huyền thuật và các đạo sĩ Tây Tạng. Cuốn sách là một thiên phóng sự đáng kinh ngạc của tác giả trong hành trình xuyên qua vùng đất Tây Tạng để khám phá các huyền thuật của đạo sĩ nơi đây. Với ý định tiếp kiến Đức Đạt Lai Lạt Ma đời thứ 13 đang lánh nạn tại Ấn Độ (vì xung đột chính trị với triều đại Mãn Thanh), Alexandra David – Neel không ngờ các bí mật về huyền thuật Tây Tạng lẫn lời chỉ dẫn sâu xa của những vị đạo sư đã dẫn bà đi xa hơn dự định ban đầu của mình. Sau 12 năm rong ruổi khắp Tây Tạng, Alexandra đã để lại tập sách Huyền thuật và các đạo sĩ Tây Tạng như một công trình nghiên cứu quan trọng về vùng đất đầy bí ẩn này. Tải ứng dụng nghe trọn bộ: voiz.vn/download
We've covered outer space explorers, rocky mountain explorers, deep ocean explorers, now it's time for an inner-space explorer. Leah is still obsessed with Tibet and talks about the First Buddhist in France who was also the first western woman to reach Lhasa. Learn about the wild explorer whose books and travels inspired the Beat Generation, Alexandra David Neel. More info at: galsguide.org Patreon: patreon.com/galsguide Facebook: www.facebook.com/galsguidelibrary/ Twitter: twitter.com/GalsGuideLib
durée : 00:53:54 - La Terre au carré - par : Mathieu Vidard - Au programme du club : les militantes de l'écologie et de la science sont à l'honneur. On dressera le portrait de l'exploratrice et féministe Alexandra David-Neel, mais aussi celui de Françoise d'Eaubonne instigatrice de l'écoféminisme. Et celui d'autres femmes scientifiques d'hier et d'aujourd'hui.
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! ¿Quién fue Alexandra David-Neel? Aventurera. Feminista molesta. Del mundo de las ideas al mundo de las cosas sólo hay diferencias de densidad. ¿Qué es un tulpa? ¿Se ha transformado nuestra vida en un tulpa? El tulpa de Alexandra David-Neel. ¿Qué es la vida? ¿Qué es un paradigma? Los funcionales a la Matrix. Sus libros. Blavatsky, Fortune y David-Neel. Los cuatro viajes al Tíbet de Alexandra David-Neel y el verdadero empoderamiento femenino. * Podrás encontrar los enlaces relacionados en la entrada correspondiente de nuestro sitio web: https://alfilodelarealidad.com/Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Al Filo de la Realidad. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/3844
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! ¿Quién fue Alexandra David-Neel? Aventurera. Feminista molesta. Del mundo de las ideas al mundo de las cosas sólo hay diferencias de densidad. ¿Qué es un tulpa? ¿Se ha transformado nuestra vida en un tulpa? El tulpa de Alexandra David-Neel. ¿Qué es la vida? ¿Qué es un paradigma? Los funcionales a la Matrix. Sus libros. Blavatsky, Fortune y David-Neel. Los cuatro viajes al Tíbet de Alexandra David-Neel y el verdadero empoderamiento femenino. * Podrás encontrar los enlaces relacionados en la entrada correspondiente de nuestro sitio web: https://alfilodelarealidad.com/Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Al Filo de la Realidad. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/3844
Escritos de Alexandra David-Neel
Los lunes en LREM nos llevan lejos. A contemplar la naturaleza con nuestru abeyeru, César Alonso, hoy en plan metafísico. El moderno Carlos Lapeña culmina la aventura por el Himalaya vivida y narrada por Alexandra David-Neel. Josefina Martínez, la "abu" (y la mente más activa) del programa nos cuenta cómo han ido sus últimos siete días. Con los oyentes hablamos de las malas costumbres ajenas que hacen la vida, si cabe, un poco más complicada. Lucía López Santos nos introduce en el laberinto de las redes sociales, Jorge Alonso recuerda el aniversario de Virginia Wolf y, con Rafa y Fernando, futboleros avispados, repasamos el fin de semana deportivo.
Los lunes en LREM nos llevan lejos. A contemplar la naturaleza con nuestru abeyeru, César Alonso, hoy en plan metafísico. El moderno Carlos Lapeña culmina la aventura por el Himalaya vivida y narrada por Alexandra David-Neel. Josefina Martínez, la "abu" (y la mente más activa) del programa nos cuenta cómo han ido sus últimos siete días. Con los oyentes hablamos de las malas costumbres ajenas que hacen la vida, si cabe, un poco más complicada. Lucía López Santos nos introduce en el laberinto de las redes sociales, Jorge Alonso recuerda el aniversario de Virginia Wolf y, con Rafa y Fernando, futboleros avispados, repasamos el fin de semana deportivo.
Los lunes en LREM nos llevan lejos. A contemplar la naturaleza con nuestru abeyeru, César Alonso, hoy en plan metafísico. El moderno Carlos Lapeña culmina la aventura por el Himalaya vivida y narrada por Alexandra David-Neel. Josefina Martínez, la "abu" (y la mente más activa) del programa nos cuenta cómo han ido sus últimos siete días. Con los oyentes hablamos de las malas costumbres ajenas que hacen la vida, si cabe, un poco más complicada. Lucía López Santos nos introduce en el laberinto de las redes sociales, Jorge Alonso recuerda el aniversario de Virginia Wolf y, con Rafa y Fernando, futboleros avispados, repasamos el fin de semana deportivo.
Los lunes en LREM nos llevan lejos. A contemplar la naturaleza con nuestru abeyeru, César Alonso, hoy en plan metafísico. El moderno Carlos Lapeña culmina la aventura por el Himalaya vivida y narrada por Alexandra David-Neel. Josefina Martínez, la "abu" (y la mente más activa) del programa nos cuenta cómo han ido sus últimos siete días. Con los oyentes hablamos de las malas costumbres ajenas que hacen la vida, si cabe, un poco más complicada. Lucía López Santos nos introduce en el laberinto de las redes sociales, Jorge Alonso recuerda el aniversario de Virginia Wolf y, con Rafa y Fernando, futboleros avispados, repasamos el fin de semana deportivo.
the second part of Jon's paper about Ron Hubbard's plagiarism. Hubbard was not the 'sole source' of Dianetics and Scientology, nor did all of the 'major' ideas come from him. With a comparison of Tibetan ideas popularized by Alexandra David-Neel in the 1930s to some of the fundamental ideas of Scientology. With many thanks to Mark Owen Plummer, for help in finding the right covers to the correct editions. This is the second of two parts; here is part one: https://youtu.be/VGQXQaiLa2A This is the fourth in a series of recordings of Jon's papers on Scientology, all of which are available to read free here: https://www.facebook.com/notes/jon-atack/jons-writings-books-speeches/284316635347772/ To see the previous videos of Jon reading his papers, see our playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOprfY0DnRsb0GBFQzrqmpMmNLRL6vmYi To see Jon's talk on the history of Hubbard and the origins of Scientology: https://youtu.be/2ILs6yB-d6A
(Chinese) Highlights: Supreme Master Ching Hai tells us aninteresting story about an adventure to Tibet made by Ms. Alexandra David-Neel, who is famous around the world as the first European woman ever stepping onto the land of Tibet. Supreme Master explains the difference between a ghost and a transformation body by comparing this lady’s experience of encountering with one of our initiates’experience of seeing Master's transformation body come to their rescue during a car accident. Ghosts with stronger ...
Alexandra David-Neel escribió este cuentito bajo la influencia de lo chingona que ya era en asuntos del Tíbet Se clavó tanto en el estudio y la aventura por conocer acerca de las religiones de Oriente y el pensamiento y filosofía también de aquellos lados, que visitó Lhasa, la capital del Tíbet, que es una ciudad prohibida para los extranjeros, pero que ella se coló como una pinche persona bien chingona, pa saberle más a todo por allá. Influyó con sus más de 30 libros a los escritores beat como Jack Kerouac y Allen Ginsberg, y también incluso a Alan Watts Escuchen este cuentito en voz de @masomenoz que está como pez en el agua glú-glú
Alexandra David Neel - Incontri con Sri Aurobindo (creato con Spreaker) by YOGA NETWORK RadioKrishna
This week, it's a warm welcome back to the show for Allison Jornlin. Allison has just launched a new YouTube channel, Paranormal Women: A Hidden History focusing on some of the paranormal trailblazers that perhaps don't get the credit they deserve or may even have fallen off the paranormal radar. As such, Allison is shining a light on some of the paranormal world's most iconic women over the last two centuries. We discuss the legendary Catherine Crowe, a woman who wrote one of the outstanding paranormal collections of the 19th century, the incredible "The Night Side of Nature" in 1848. A collection of paranormal research, witness testimony and investigation, her book set the template for paranormal research today and has always been one of my favourite researchers. We also discuss the incredible force of nature that was Alexandra David-Neel, a former opera singer who discovered Buddhism and embraced it to such an extent that her knowledge changed the whole way it was viewed in the Western world. From creating Tulpa's and sneaking into forbidden territories, nothing seemed too much for David-Neel to achieve. She was also an anarchist, ran a casino and adopted a Buddhist monk. We also talk about the author, Zora Neal Hurston, the woman who brought the world of Voodoo and Zombies into popular culture but also saw her career take such a nosedive, most of her personal possessions were burned after she died. These three women are titans in the history of the paranormal and yet most people haven't even heard of any of them. You can download a free PDF of The Night Side of Nature here:Allison's YouTube channel is here:Allison's Facebook page is here: A big thank you to Allison for joining me today. Don't forget, I need YOUR ghost stories for an upcoming show, so if you have a spooky encounter you wish to share with me, anonymously if you wish, please drop me a line titling your email - GHOST STORY to mysteriesandmonsters@gmail.com Our Patreon is now live, with bonus content, early release of the regular show, articles and monthly prizes for everyone who signs up! Join here now for the flat fee of $4 a month which is a bargain! Don't forget, you can now show your support with our Merchandise shop on Redbubble! Check it out here! You can join us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram as well. You can also subscribe to our YouTube channel! Email us at mysteriesandmonsters@gmail.com with any feedback, guest suggestions or if you'd like to appear. All artwork by Dean Bestall and the show was produced by Brennan Storr of the Ghost Story Guys. #AllisonJornlin #Ghosts #Haunting #TheNightSideOfNature #CatherineCrowe #AlexandraDavid-Neel #Tibet #CharlesDickens #Edinburgh #ZoraNealeHurston #Voodoo #Vodoo #Haiti #Zombies #Tulpa #Tumo #Buddhism #MagicandMysteryInTibet #MulesandMen #TellMyHorse
I talk about Mme David-Neel's book. Allan Watts' introduction, and his place in history. My own prejudice. Book review and Introduce a very special person in history. Mme David-Neel's impact on feminism, Buddhism, Tibet, and on history itself is not something to be overlooked. -- The secret oral teachings in Tibetan Buddhist sects. By Alexandra David-Neel and Lama Yongden. --
I discuss the book 'breath' by author James Nestor. I discuss tantric yoga and Tibetan yoga. The Bardos, and tummo. How this all relates to awareness and liberation for all beings. Chandali yoga. Alexandra David-Neel. HP Blavatsky. Theosophical society.
Alexandra David-Neel est une aventurière, tibétologue, féministe, auteure, bouddhiste, cantatrice… Elle est surtout la première occidentale à entrer dans la cité alors interdite de Lhassa au Tibet. Portrait de cette femme exceptionnelle avec Jeanne Mascolo de Filippis auteure du livre "Alexandra David-Neel, 100 ans dʹaventures" éditions Paulsen.
Pablo Piñeiro publica 'Lo positivo de fracasar en el amor', el libro que da las claves de cómo amar sin jerarquías ni posesión durante la 'nueva normalidad'. José Mª Pascual nos invita a conocer más de cerca la figura de Alexandra David Neel: Exploradora y feminista, con la lectura del libró igualmente titulado. Escuchar audio
In a very quarantine episode of Armchair Apocrypha, Andrew goes into the times and travels of spiritualist, feminist, and anarchist Alexandra David-Neel, while Rachael takes a look at one of Chicago's foremost settlement houses and the woman who founded it.
Dans cet épisode nous allons à la découverte des régions himalayennes. Nous embarquons à bord de deux récits alliant spiritualité bouddhiste, et Tibet interdit. Ces deux femmes aventurières en quête d'exploration découvrent cette religion millénaire où l'environnement ne semble pas innocent dans le mode de pensée. A écouter et à réécouter sans modération. Merci à Jeanne Mascolo, vous pouvez retrouver le livre qu'elle a écrit : Alexandra David-Neel, cent ans d'aventure. Sources extraits sonores : - RTF (Radiodiffusion-télévision française) - Alexandra David-Neel : Le Tibet tel que je l'ai vu - Entretiens avec Michel Manoll (1954-1955) - France Culture - Alexandra David-Neel, la 1ère Occidentale au Tibet - Extrait INA Réalisation : Matthieu Klitting
Today’s reading, The Theory of the Individual in Chinese Philosophy: Yang-Chou, is from Neither Lord Nor Subject: Anarchism & Eastern Thought, a collection compiled by Enemy Combatant Publications and made available through Little Black Cart. Neither Lord Nor Subject at LittleBlackCart.comEnemy Combatant Publications at LittleBlackCart.com Offer feedback to Cory@LittleBlackCart.com. Thanks for listening!
durée : 01:05:00 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit, Albane Penaranda, Mathilde Wagman - Par Michel Manoll - Avec Alexandra David-Néel et Michel Manoll - Réalisation Harold Portnoy - réalisé par : Viginie Mourthé
durée : 01:05:00 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit, Catherine Liber, Albane Penaranda - En 1924, Alexandra David-Néel est la première femme a avoir pu entrer dans la ville tibétaine de Lhassa. Son voyage demeurait mystérieux et inconnu du reste du monde. En 1954, trente ans après cet exploit, l’aventurière raconte ce pays tel qu’elle l’a vécu. Elle se confie à l'écrivain Michel Manoll. - invités : Alexandra David-Néel - Alexandra David-Neel : - réalisé par : Viginie Mourthé
La figura de la antropóloga francesa Alexandra David-Neel es una de las más desconocidas y le sobran motivos para todo lo contrario. En el cronovisor de esta semana viajaremos con ella para conocer los secretos del Tíbet. Santiago Blasco ha publicado la novela Campo de la Estrella en ella vamos a descubrir el porqué del trazado del Camino de Santiago. Carmen Panadero experta en temas medievales andalusíes nos cuenta la historia del Motín del Arrabal vivido en la Córdoba del siglo IX y que dio pie a la creación de un califato en Creta. Elena Cid, directora del documental Bécquer y las Brujas nos habla de la literatura romántica de este escritor sevillano. Acabamos con Jorge Blass, mago y Ricardo Sánchez, mago y encargado de la tienda Magia Estudio de Madrid, hablando de los magos españoles hasta el siglo XX
Oggi Tarò, il podcast sui Tarocchi e sui racconti di vita, vi parlerà della carta del Diavolo, della creazione del demone e degli egregor. Ditemi la vostra su questa puntata, sulla pagina Facebook ufficiale di Tarò! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tar-il-podcast-che-racconta-i-tarocchi/message
Thank you for listening and remember, Mysteries Abound. Find us at: Twitter: @FabledPod Instagram: @fabledpod #fabledpod #mysteriesabound Join the conversation at our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/fabledpod Transcript: First off, I want to give a huge shout out to Jim, who goes by @Hellhound911 on Twitter for the kind iTunes review and to reaching out to me @FabledPod on Twitter to let me know he listens. Listeners like him help the production of a show such as this all the more worthwhile. Also thank you to Ryan Simms (@RSimm_01 on Twitter) for listening and for the feedback on the episode lengths. This show started as a passion project of mine and the episodes have been only as long as I could stand to listen to myself talk. The episodes are getting incrementally longer as my comfort level increases so longer episodes should be coming down the pike soon. One last shout out to shnoobles for the great review on iTunes. If you haven’t yet, leave a review on iTunes and share this show with a friend; it’s the best way to keep this thing going and to build a great community of listeners. I’ve started a Facebook group as well and I’ll link it in the description of this episode. Thank you all so much for the support. Now, on with the show... Tulpas. Thoughtforms. Egregore. Our last episode covered the basics of what these were and outlined some topics that you may need to have a passing knowledge of for this episode. If you have not done so yet, please go back and listen to part one. It is worth it. We will all be here waiting when you return. A photo of a group of children exists. In that photo, the seemingly-terrified children look toward the camera in what appears to be abject horror; some appear to be running, some soldiering on toward the cameraman, shoulders slumped and eyes downcast. In the background of this photo there is… something. A blur, or mist in the vague shape of a humanoid. The pale, featureless orb atop its neck where a head should be faces the camera and takes in the children before it. This entity is ushering the children along, but to what end? Who can tell? Below, the photo is captioned: We didn't want to go, we didn't want to kill them, but its persistent silence and outstretched arms horrified and comforted us at the same time… [Dated] 1983, photographer unknown, presumed dead. The Slender Man has arrived. One day in 2014, 12 year olds Anissa and Morgan lured their friend Peyton into the woods. Once deep enough into the woods that they would not be disturbed or overheard, the two girls attacked Peyton, one holding her down while another stabbed her 19 times. It was a horrible, inexcusable crime and I am deeply sorry to the families of those affected. For our purposes, this is all the detail that needs to be discussed. The case has been documented in detail in many other places. Why would two children do this to a friend? According to the two attackers, this was an attempt to appease the Slender Man, to prove to the world that he was real, and the sacrifice of this little girl was going to be the key to doing just that. But Peyton survived the brutal and senseless assault. Mustering her strength and crawling out of the woods to the nearest road, she flagged down a bicyclist who contacted first responders. Luckily, Peyton made it through the ordeal and lived to assist police in finding her attackers. Anissa and Morgan were so convinced that the Slender Man was real that they were willing to take the life of another child to prove it. They are paying for their crimes, but the fact remains that they attempted to kill for a fictional creature. This is an extreme example concerning the validity of Slender Man’s existence. But many more people have claimed to have seen or even interacted with the creature. Most, like the aforementioned criminal act, can be disregarded as mental instability or overactive imaginations but is every case so easily discounted? Can it be possible that, much like Alexandra David-Neel’s portly monk, we have collectively created a thoughtform that has broken free from its creator? Can an internet myth really be responsible for mass suicides among Native American youth, attempted arsons, or multiple cases of attempted murder? Slender Man may not be real, but the crimes committed in his name are. To the children perpetrating this heinous acts the creature is just as real as you or I, and who are we say for sure that the Slender Man didn’t actually play a role here? Logic tells us that this is the act of a disturbed mind attempting to rationalize the demons in her own head, but monsters like the eponymous “Shadow People” that resemble Slender Man have surfaced in the mythology of man across every culture for centuries, even occasionally bleeding into our pop culture. In 2008 a film called “The Recovered” was released direct to streaming which included an entity called “The Business Man” that resembled Slender Man down to the smallest details. The creators of the film are not on the record as to a particular source of inspiration for The Business Man but it resembles several myths and legends that we will get into on future episodes. One part of the truth concerning Slender Man is this: we have the privilege of being able to pinpoint the myth being created. On June 10th, 2009, an internet forum called Something Awful decided to have a contest to see who could produce the best photoshopped paranormal image. A user known by the pseudonym Victor Surge added a menacing, tall, pale, and inhuman figure into the background of several photos that included groups of children. To really make his work stand out, he also added lines of text with the photos. One of the lines I read at the top of this episode. Its creepy stuff, but entirely fictional. None of the events in the photos took place and the images were altered to include the Slender Man in the background. From there, the legend took off and has permeated every dark corner of the internet in the intervening nine years. If the mystics discussed in the first part of this series are to be believed, could this be the trigger point for our collective conscience to create a tulpa in the form of Slender Man? Enough people are certainly focusing on him as a simple Google search yields 14.5 million results. And yet, even if Slender Man is just a myth, where does the idea for creatures like the Shadow People, the Business Man, and Slender Man come from? Is there, much like the myth of the dragon, an archetype that resides in our collective conscience that has allowed every culture on the planet to have a similar mythos concerning tall, humanoid creatures that seduce us to darkness? Or is there an observable force that calls to us? A force that lurks in our darkest forests, our deepest caves, our highest mountains, and our nearest closet? One thing is certain: reports of these creatures are not decreasing. Maybe it’s time we took them serious, before the Slender Man comes for us next. Goodnight, dear listener. Fabled is a podcast for fans of Unsolved Mysteries, Lore, Slender Man, mysteries, mystery, Pokemon, creepypasta, creepy pasta, horror stories, horror, paranormal, ghosts, legends, myths, and stories.
Nick Redfern makes his way into the house for the first time. Nick is the author of damn near 50 books on various paranormal and fortean topics, and we’ll be chatting be about one of his latest books, The Slenderman Mysteries: An Internet Urban Legend Comes to Life. If you’re not familiar with the Slenderman phenomenon, be prepared to get familiar, because we’re gonna give you all the crazy details of it, as well as take some detours into the worlds of HP Lovecraft, Alexandra David-Neel, Dion Fortune, Aleister Crowley and Coast to Coast AM, and we’ll touch on some Slenderman-type mythos from before Slendy himself was even a meme. But for now, grab some popcorn and maybe a flashlight and let's venture through the wooded recesses of the Internet mind with the paranormal’s most prolific private eye, Mr. Nick Redfern. RESOURCES The Slenderman Mysteries on Amazon Nick’s website PATREON Please do take a moment to check out our Patreon campaign. We call it Coda. Four levels of support. Bonus content. Free shit. Click here to check it out. DONATE If recurring monthly support via Patreon isn’t your thing, we do accept one time-donations via PayPal, Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple. Every little bit helps. Click here if you’re interested. MERCH We recently released our first t-shirt. Check it out on our website or at our Etsy shop. SOCIAL Twitter Instagram Facebook Tumblr MUSIC Vestron Vulture - “I Want to be a Robot (Tribute to Giorgio Moroder)” PRODUCTION & LICENSING This podcast is produced in the Kingdom of Ohio and is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International. Executive Producers: Mike K., Erick, Carter Y., Mauricio G., Alyssa S., Daniel R., Tess, Joe T., Kelly C., Daniel E., Kaleb H. REMINDER Love yourself. Think for yourself. Question authority.
Thank you for listening and remember, Mysteries Abound. Find us at: Twitter: @FabledPod Instagram: @fabledpod #fabledpod #mysteriesabound Join the conversation at our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/fabledpod Humans love to make monsters. From Count Dracula to Jigsaw, we can’t help but give the creatures living in the dark corners of our minds some semblance of life. Whether that life is on paper and housed in the imaginations of the reader or seen on the big screen at your local cinema, we delight in frightening each other with the horrors we create and, at the end of our experiences with them, we take a breath and tell ourselves “That was fun but at least it wasn’t real.” And that’s true... right? What if the monsters that dwell in our imagination have the potential to be just that: real? Is it possible we can create our worst fears by focusing so intensely on them that they spring into existence, fully formed and ready to rain terror on us? Some think so, and this focus on our fears may have created the worst monster of all: Today, we discuss Slender Man. To get to where we need to go with this idea of what Slender Man may be, we need to travel back in time to the origins of Tibetan Buddhism and explore the idea of the Thought-Form, or Tulpa, which is also referred to as an Emanation in ancient scripts. Going back to the earliest days of Buddhism there have always been teachings that deal with the concept of time, reality, and what we really are as sentient creatures. These teachings on the nature of reality led some of the practitioners of Buddhism to develop the concept of the Emanation. An Emanation, or Tulpa, was an extension of oneself on a spiritual level, however, powerful Buddha were said to have been able to create individual Tulpas that could think and act outside the will of their creator. This ability to create an Emanation was an explanation in early Buddhism as to how some of the Buddha throughout history were able to travel to heavenly realms while their body remained here in this realm. The practitioners would meditate in such a focused way that they would literally create a projection or copy of themselves in the heavenly realm they wished to visit. Obviously the idea of the Tulpa is a deeply spiritual one to practitioners of different sects of Buddhism and is vastly different in practice to the Thought-Forms we will discuss shortly. However, for our purposes, it is important to note that people have been claiming the ability to literally create beings from nothing but thoughts for many centuries. As with most things, Western culture in the early 20th century took the teachings of the Tibetan monks and adapted the concept of the Emanation into the idea of the Thought-Form and brought it to America. These people, calling themselves Theosophists, or religious philosophers, were led by a woman named Helena Blavatsky and drew upon what she referred to as ancient knowledge from “The Masters”, or, ancient spirits whom she claimed to have a psychic or spiritual connection with. Theosophists believed that if groups of people focused their thoughts on a particular idea for long enough, it would manifest physically in our world. Another group who took the concept of the Tulpa and ran with it was The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. This group rose to some popularity in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and included notable people such as Alistair Crowley, the famed magician, author, and occult leader, among its ranks and leadership. The HOGD was a group of like-minded people who focused their studies on such things as the occult, paranormal activity, and metaphysics as a way to understand the world around them and to practice magic that might benefit themselves. Among many things they are known for (mostly large orgies claiming to be for channeling some sort of universal magic) this group practiced a magic with the idea that they could summon some sort of psychic though-form being known to them as the Egregore. The Egregore, according to this group, could be summoned by particularly powerful people or collectively via psychic projection. Much like the following anecdote, this Egregore was also said to be autonomous and independent from its creators, like the Tulpa over time grew to be. Interestingly enough, the Egregore has also been used to explain the way a modern meme can spread and deliver ideas to masses of people simultaneously. As opposed to a physical being manifesting, an idea manifests in our collective conscience from the meme. At the same time the Theosophists and the Golden Dawn were appropriating the Eastern mythology for their own uses, a woman named Alexandra David-Neel (pronounced Nael) was studying Eastern religion in Tibet. Now, she claims to have seen a Tulpa in action while there, and some of her writings claim she even created one for herself. She writes of a portly monk often seen with her that, if she is to be believed, may have been her very own Tulpa. Her writings go on to discuss a sort of self-awareness the Tulpa gains as it ages which eventually lead to the creation attempting to disassociate, sometimes violently, from its creator in an attempt to keep itself manifested. Regardless of where you look into this subject, all parties involved (including the ancient scripts) warn of some danger with summoning Tulpa, and extreme caution must be taken when attempting to summon one. Now all of this seems like a lot to go over in such a short amount of time. The concepts of Theosophy can be difficult to wrap your mind around, so if you are interested in the subject of Theosophy, you can grab a copy of Blavatsky’s book “The Secret Doctrine.” It is a fascinating read. For more information on Tulpas, seek out books from Christopher O’Brien or scroll through the archives of a podcast called The Paracast. So how does this connect to The Slender Man, you might ask? Now that I’ve briefly explained the idea of the thought-form or Tulpa, You have just enough knowledge about the subject to continue on however I implore you to dig a little deeper into this subject. It will be worth your time. Our next episode will be available shortly and, dear listener, The Slender Man is coming. Be afraid. Fabled is a podcast for fans of Unsolved Mysteries, Lore, Slender Man, mysteries, mystery, Pokemon, creepypasta, creepy pasta, horror stories, horror, paranormal, ghosts, legends, myths, and stories.
La Bougeotte Episode 6 - Nos lectures de voyage Pour ce sixième épisode de La Bougeotte, nous vous proposons un nouveau format puisque nous avons choisi de vous parler de nos lectures de voyage.Depuis l'Iran, Daisy nous parle du récit à travers la Perse de Pierre Loti, "Vers Ispahan". Laura nous lit des passages bien féministes badass de "Journal de voyage", la correspondance de l'exploratrice Alexandra David-Neel. Et Marine nous parle aussi d'une voyageuse hors norme, Nellie Bly et son "Tour du monde en 72 jours". Crédit musique générique : Lessazo, "Chérie la Kro"
Segunda y postrera entrega de la película "Mi hija Hildegart" dirigida por Fernando Fernán Gómez, acompañada de textos de Schopenhauer y Alexandra David Neel
Népal, Maldives, deux voyages que Joyce et François vous proposent dans cette Récréation Sonore. Pour cette avant dernière de la saison, ils sont allés, chacun de leur côté, glaner des sons dans deux pays au présent tourmenté. Au Népal, d'abord, où François a séjourné un mois en février 2013. Le Népal, pays hautement sonore, dans lequel le micro attrape et piège des kilos et des kilos de sons, cloches, musique, klaxons, prières... Le Népal, pays très durement touché par deux tremblements de terre, n'est probablement plus aujourd'hui ce qu'il était en février 2013... Népal Avant est un carnet de voyage dans lequel François se souvient de ce qu'il a entendu de ce pays, de Katmandu à Baktapur, en passant par Boddnath et Tapoban où se trouve l'ashram de la communauté Osho... [caption id="attachment_19339" align="aligncenter" width="1016"] Durbar Square, Katmandu. Février 2013[/caption] Aux Maldives ensuite, d'où revient Joyce, qui vient d'y passer le mois de mai. Entre ses travaux pour un célèbre guide de tourisme, Joyce s'est baladée partout, micro en main. De Malé, la capitale aux plus reculées des îles hôtel, de spot de surf en marché aux poissons, Joyce a capté un grand nombre d'ambiances mais surtout la parole des habitants de ce pays qui traverse actuellement une période politique troublée. Entre un pouvoir autoritaire qui impose la charia et un président progressiste emprisonné, comment se situent les Maldiviens ? Un début de réponse dans Même pas Malé, une carte postale sonore venue de l'Océan Indien. [caption id="attachment_19340" align="aligncenter" width="720"] Le son des poissons, Fishmarket de Malé. Mai 2015[/caption] Népal - Maldives, une émission de Joyce Conroy-Aktouche et François Bordonneau Népal Avant (31') : enregistré en février 2013 à Katmandu, Boddnath, Baktapur, Patan et Tapoban. Voix additionnelles : Marion Jobert, François Bordonneau et Elisa Vallon. Textes (dans l'ordre) : Alexandra David-Neel, François Bordonneau, Jane Austen Même pas Malé (15') : enregistré en mai 2015 aux Maldives, avec Hamza, Aradhana Kothari et Joyce Conroy-Aktouche Dans l'émission de dimanche 28 juin 2015 découvrez une 2° carte postale sonore des Maldives consacrée à l'île hôtel de Soneva Fushi.
Népal, Maldives, deux voyages que Joyce et François vous proposent dans cette Récréation Sonore. Pour cette avant dernière de la saison, ils sont allés, chacun de leur côté, glaner des sons dans deux pays au présent tourmenté. Au Népal, d'abord, où François a séjourné un mois en février 2013. Le Népal, pays hautement sonore, dans lequel le micro attrape et piège des kilos et des kilos de sons, cloches, musique, klaxons, prières... Le Népal, pays très durement touché par deux tremblements de terre, n'est probablement plus aujourd'hui ce qu'il était en février 2013... Népal Avant est un carnet de voyage dans lequel François se souvient de ce qu'il a entendu de ce pays, de Katmandu à Baktapur, en passant par Boddnath et Tapoban où se trouve l'ashram de la communauté Osho... [caption id="attachment_19339" align="aligncenter" width="1016"] Durbar Square, Katmandu. Février 2013[/caption] Aux Maldives ensuite, d'où revient Joyce, qui vient d'y passer le mois de mai. Entre ses travaux pour un célèbre guide de tourisme, Joyce s'est baladée partout, micro en main. De Malé, la capitale aux plus reculées des îles hôtel, de spot de surf en marché aux poissons, Joyce a capté un grand nombre d'ambiances mais surtout la parole des habitants de ce pays qui traverse actuellement une période politique troublée. Entre un pouvoir autoritaire qui impose la charia et un président progressiste emprisonné, comment se situent les Maldiviens ? Un début de réponse dans Même pas Malé, une carte postale sonore venue de l'Océan Indien. [caption id="attachment_19340" align="aligncenter" width="720"] Le son des poissons, Fishmarket de Malé. Mai 2015[/caption] Népal - Maldives, une émission de Joyce Conroy-Aktouche et François Bordonneau Népal Avant (31') : enregistré en février 2013 à Katmandu, Boddnath, Baktapur, Patan et Tapoban. Voix additionnelles : Marion Jobert, François Bordonneau et Elisa Vallon. Textes (dans l'ordre) : Alexandra David-Neel, François Bordonneau, Jane Austen Même pas Malé (15') : enregistré en mai 2015 aux Maldives, avec Hamza, Aradhana Kothari et Joyce Conroy-Aktouche Dans l'émission de dimanche 28 juin 2015 découvrez une 2° carte postale sonore des Maldives consacrée à l'île hôtel de Soneva Fushi.
La razón de hacer ésta antología personal es porque gracias a la literatura fantástica he viajado más de lo que mis bolsillos me permiten, he conocido personajes tan particulares que probablemente no encontraré en la vida real y me ha hecho estar en circunstancias y momentos que cuando nací, ya habían pasado. Un proyecto de Zonacontraley con la voz y edición de David Saldaña Purkiss Ciudad Guzmán México 2014