Hey, Maybe There Is Another Way

by Natalie Hawthorne, London, UK

My life is and always will be forever developing, and I’d like to share just two examples of where I started to look at it and say “hey, maybe there is another way”. Such as when I started to play with the idea of Self-Love and things stuck out like a sore thumb…

I was living the ‘normal life’ as a general manager of an extremely busy restaurant/bar; I started to realise that the way I was choosing to live wasn’t loving, nor did it feel right. I would take the deliveries, and as you can imagine, it’s with large quantities of stock involved with the beverage side of things… back then to me moving the kegs of beer and carrying all the bottles of wine to the storeroom to prove that I didn’t need any help and I was strong! (This being part of my Kiwi upbringing: girls can do anything – even play rugby!) I was ignoring any signs that I felt when I was straining myself, as it was good for me and making me strong! Continue reading “Hey, Maybe There Is Another Way”

Colour and Class Distinction – Where Are You From?

As a woman of 38 years I have a mixed complexion that today is very normal, even the norm with the continuing integration of races, nationalities and cultures.

As a child growing up though, this was not quite so and ‘Skin Colour’ itself was a distinct theme which over the years had created a distinct sense of minority, inferiority, disadvantage, exclusion but also inclusion. And tainted by background or class, it seeded a supremacist ideal to spoil any ease or joy being felt or lived…

From a visual perspective I remember my looks confusing as much as fascinating and sparking wonder from people. I would get things like “…with that sounding name, where are you from?” and then they’d ask again “no, I mean where are you originally from?” And when I’d give the exact same reply to the first question, the third question came, “oh ok, but where are your parents actually from?”… Continue reading “Colour and Class Distinction – Where Are You From?”

David Millikan: The Greatest Story Ever… Missed

by Matthew Brown, Subiaco, Perth, WA

David Millikan, your approach was so very wrong.

Most people have the ability of self-reflection or self-analysis to determine whether what they are doing has a sense of being right or wrong.

It seems that to gatecrash a Universal Medicine evening, lie to the host (Serge Benhayon) and attempt to incite reactions from those in attendance for a story, displays a complete lack of self-analysis. Such behaviour should be illegal! Continue reading “David Millikan: The Greatest Story Ever… Missed”

David Millikan: I Could Have Stayed At Home And Had Pizza!

by Simon Asquith, Byron Bay, Australia

My friends and I were ambushed tonight (Friday 12th October 2012).

Once a month I choose to attend a presentation by Universal Medicine and Serge Benhayon: I choose to go because I like what he has to say. I could have gone to watch a band with some friends… I could have stayed home and had a pizza and watched a movie. But I felt like going, because I like the people there and what Serge Benhayon has to say. Continue reading “David Millikan: I Could Have Stayed At Home And Had Pizza!”

The Power of Love

 by Rowena Parkes

The Truth about Universal Medicine is that it is a vehicle through which Serge Benhayon can present certain principles of the way we can live on this Earth with love and with honour, for ourselves and for others. It is entirely up to the people who come to the Universal Medicine presentations as to whether and how they incorporate this information into their lives.

I met Serge Benhayon 12 years ago, and have been attending his presentations for many years. I have seen with my own eyes how people have benefitted from choices they have made to change the way they live. The principles that Serge presents are not anything other than pure common sense when it comes right down to it. Continue reading “The Power of Love”

Thank you to all you beautiful Bloggers!

by Sheila Colwell, BA (hons), PhD, Development Officier, Brisbane, Australia

I don’t want to sound ‘Pollyanna-ish’, but for me there has been an unexpected and positive result of the unwarranted media attacks on Serge Benhayon, his family, Universal Medicine (UniMed) and the many esoteric practitioners involved with UniMed.

I have been reading the blog posts from people who tell the truth about Serge Benhayon and their experiences with Universal Medicine and am in awe of how these wonderful people have the courage to write so openly about their own lives, struggles, steps along the path, realisations, changes made, etc.

In some ways, reading and learning from this testimony has formed one of the most powerful experiences I have had with the Universal Medicine community over the past six years. Continue reading “Thank you to all you beautiful Bloggers!”