Introduce Yourself to Your Fellow Students

New Home Forums Course Forums Kabbalah Revealed Interactive – Part 1 Start Here Introduce Yourself to Your Fellow Students

  • #28777

    Introduce yourself to your fellow students. Write a few words about yourself and about what you expect from the course.

Viewing 6 posts - 433 through 438 (of 5,697 total)
  • Author
    Replies
    • #387662
      Shaun
      Participant

      Greetings from a game developer residing in Scotland, UK.  I have been self-studying Kabbalah for many years now, finally decided to give KabU a go.

    • #387512
      Erlina
      Participant

      Greetings from Tucson, Arizona,  USA. My name is Erlina Edwards. Thank you for this opportunity. I have some knowledge of Kabbalah. I have taken several live and online courses in the past. I have been away from direct teachings since a few life events disrupted my learning, and I look forward to re-engaging.

      All the best,

      Erlina

    • #387489
      John
      Participant

      Im john. Need to learn the basics before advancing into deeper mysteries.

    • #387413
      Gyuro Kozmo
      Participant

      I did write an introduction already…so now I just say Hi.  

    • #387397
      Mary
      Participant

      Hi,

      I don’t think Alice and the White Rabbit, have anything compared to the study of Kabbalah.

      I am ready for this wild non ride-ride!

       

    • #387362
      Eliyah
      Participant

      Hi

       

      Watched the 6 hour video.

      Excellent

      • #387422
        Gyuro Kozmo
        Participant

        Every creative poetic endeavour has similar points or overlapping sets with some parts in the different Kabbalistic approaches. The common field is similar to the pre-talk infant’s solipsist [= all-is-me] vision: a personified cosmic order [ same as in Neoplatonic Gnostic writings] and the use of metaphores and word plays or rhymes. Freud took most of his concepts from Kabbalah [ which he cautiously mentions as *secret folklore*. But we better forget all paralellism. Because the mentioned other works have no everyday usage: Kabbalah is still used by Hasidic study groups to reignite our grasp of complex daily paradoxes we encounter in Torah/Bible study.

Viewing 6 posts - 433 through 438 (of 5,697 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.