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  • katy
    Participant

    I have loved learning about the other levels of consciousness and how they too have connection the the Upper Light. This really brought to life the  concept of creation crying out to HaShem’s glory

    katy
    Participant

    I would say the best part of the last course was actually the requirement to “unlearn.” Having previously held understandings torn down, dismantled, and handed back nearly unrecognizable was a strange kind of refreshment. I’m hoping to go much deeper in this course and would like to feel more connected soon to actual lifestyle changes as a result. Currently this still feels like a subject of study, and not as much a way of life for me. My perceptions have certainly changed, and I can tell I am farther along than I was- just maybe not in a specified measurable way. Perhaps this next course will clarify my own position on the ladder

    katy
    Participant

    It’s my wish that all students who approach Kabbalah through KabU are able to take away practical applications for their lives. It’s one thing to learn, another to live out what you learn .

    katy
    Participant

    I desire to have a deeper relationship to The Creator. I desire to know and be known. This course is just another stepping stone along that path.

    in reply to: Introduce Yourself to Your Fellow Students #183508
    katy
    Participant

    Aloha 🙂 my name is Katy Lanuza. My husband and our 2 children and I live on the Big Island of Hawaii. I’m a professional dancer and painter. For many years I have studied Torah and later Kabbalist interpretation. This season there has been a spark to create a contemporary ballet centered around the sephirot. Abstract art is in play, and of course the deeper understandings Kabbalah has to offer. I’m hoping to gain still deeper insight from the course as I desire to apply it to the movement structure and choices made in presentation of such a delicate subject matter in a performing arts situation. My true desire is to use my art as a conduit for these sacred teachings to reach into those who view it and allow them a new curiosity and hunger for HaShem. I am a Christian, but not of the Western definition. Yeshua was a Jew and I have never questioned the need to keep my focus in a Judaic foundation. Thank you for offering the course for free as the arts are truly in a place right now that needs support financially as well as spiritually. I pray all involved are blessed for their efforts, but that above all HaShem is blessed by our efforts.

Viewing 5 replies - 19 through 23 (of 23 total)