I have noticed something about the shift in consciousness movement. It appears to me that the people who are creating these new paradigms for living are the people who would least be expected to do so. I had this belief that people who live in the so-called “developed” world enjoy a certain kind of comfort that makes them more insulated and resistant to change. But it appears to be just the opposite. Could it be that people of the developed world have a more up close and personal relationship with this system? that they are beginning to see through it? Anyway, these are questions I ask myself as I observe movements like the urban gardening movement and the alternative dwelling space movement. Here is a sampling of some of these alternative dwelling spaces from Pinterest, my “go to place” for inspiration.
about the author:
Akilah t'Zuberi Consciousness writer, author, futurist and metaphysician, Akilah t’Zuberi focuses on the relationship between our beliefs and thoughts and the experiences we have each and everyday, including the workplace experience. She assists her readers in becoming aware of a dominant belief system that the majority of the people in the world subscribe to. This belief system can, one belief, one thought at a time, shift. It is possible to create one that will operate not only for one’s higher good, but for the higher good of families, communities, businesses, the global community and the planet.
Akilah earned a bachelor’s degree in English and a master’s degree in women’s literature from California State University, Sacramento. Her Ph.D. in metaphysics is from the American Institute of Holistic Theology.
She is an artist, an avid gardener as well as author of two books: 16 Mondays for people who hate their jobs and The You Scriptures. She also publishes the Inner World Press Shift in Consciousness Ezine at www.innerworldpress.com. Her third publication, Graphic notes to The Sessions in Shifting is available at www.sessionsinshifting.com. She is currently working on her fourth book which she hopes to complete in the fall, 2014. She divides her time between Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Oaxaca, Mexico.