Space Echo

Space Echo
Sounds Space - I think madness-madness-madness. ?

BongĂ´s of pulsars, low black hole and serious component of the Big Bang cosmic music as the record astronomers say.

When Pink Floyd was assigned the creation of "space music"

But this time Pink Floyd has already asked how music or if the U.S. space interplanetary space, interstellar or intergalactic want to say, has no air to be vibrado and produce sounds, as can be talking about sounds or echoes space?

I think madness-madness-madness. And you?

I think you may need to clarify this question and post it in a different category. It doesn't make any sense as a Board Games question.

Roland Space Echo NEW RUBBER PINCH ROLLER suits RE 201 RE 301 RE 501 SRE555
Roland Space Echo NEW RUBBER PINCH ROLLER suits RE 201 RE 301 RE 501 SRE555
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Roland Space Echo FULL SERVICE KITSAVE OVER $80 for RE 201 RE 101 RE 150 etc
Roland Space Echo FULL SERVICE KITSAVE OVER $80 for RE 201 RE 101 RE 150 etc
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Boss RE 20 Roland Space Echo Delay Pedal
Boss RE 20 Roland Space Echo Delay Pedal
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2 x NEW TAPE LOOPS Roland Space Echo RT 1L replacement for RE 101 RE 201 etc
2 x NEW TAPE LOOPS Roland Space Echo RT 1L replacement for RE 101 RE 201 etc
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ROLAND RT1L Space Echo TAPE LOOPS RT 1L SUB
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SR Audio Tape Head Cleaner for BrandModel Tape Echo DelayEchoplexReverb
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Roland Space Echo FELT SET for RE 201 RE 101 RE 150 RE 301 RE 501 SRE 555
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Boss RE 20 Roland Space Echo RE 201 Guitar Effect Pedal New
Boss RE 20 Roland Space Echo RE 201 Guitar Effect Pedal New
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RE 201 Boss RE20 Space Echo RE 20 Echo Effects Roland Guitar Pedal
RE 201 Boss RE20 Space Echo RE 20 Echo Effects Roland Guitar Pedal
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The Hidden Abundance of Letting Go: Clearing Physical, Mental and Emotional Space

One rainy September day, 18 months after we moved in, we went downstairs, and in an afternoon, we just plowed through the task. We wound up donating or tossing about two-thirds of it. We hadn't needed it for a year and half; we certainly didn't need it then! Now that corner is clear. When I look over there, I notice the light pouring in the window. The physical space is clear -- but so is the space in my head that was perpetually occupied whenever I looked at that unresolved pile of boxes.

It is an interesting and difficult issue to address, this intense emotional connection we sometimes have with the things we own, including our "intangible" possessions -- our health, our beliefs about ourselves and others, our old grudges and unresolved pain. All these things take up space. Sometimes they take up so much space that there's isn't much room for anything else. We wish for simplicity -- but letting go can be difficult and sometimes even painful for a number of reasons, even when hanging on is to our emotional detriment.

One reason is just how our brains process input. We have one neurological path that could be considered "the path of reason." That's the part of our brain that looks at a chair and sees an item made of wood and fabric. The other neurological path is one that is profoundly and instantaneously linked to emotion and memory. When it sees the chair, it remembers all the things -- pleasant and unpleasant -- associated with that item. So something as simple as a chair could, for its owner, be deeply symbolic of experiences like suffocating guilt, a failed relationship, grief, or a sense of being constantly overwhelmed. It's easy to see how a house or a heart filled with these triggers can become a tough place to live peacefully.

My friend Heidi DeCoux is a professional organizer specializing in home organization. She explains the cycle of physical and emotional chaos like this:

The problem, everyone says, is the clutter. Actually, the real problem is ... the lack of space. When we don't have space, there's nowhere to grow and no room for anything new. Instead, we experience more stuffing and filling versus positive, beneficial growth.

I recently listened to a wonderful interview with coach and author of the book Throw Out Fifty Things, Gail Blanke. She explained that the point of clearing things out isn't so that you can live in a pristine, sterile environment without a speck of dust (preoccupation with "perfection" can be its own type of emotional clutter). It's so that you can make space for new ideas and new possibilities, clear a path for forward movement. Heidi echoes this philosophy in her own work: "Organizing is not so much about organizing things as it is about seeing the transformation of people."

Blanke has a kind of litmus test which she calls the Rules of Disengagement for letting go of the things that can hold us back:

*       Let it go - if the thing, idea, feeling, or person weighs you down, hurts you consistently, or holds you back.

*       If it (the idea, feeling, person, or thing) takes up space and contributes nothing - let it go.

*       Let it go -- if you continuously deliberate, always weighing the pluses and negatives - "Should I let it go? Should I keep it? As Heidi says, "An environment of guilt is created in the stuff you feel guilty about getting rid of - who can grow in that?"

*       Don't make it so difficult. Things that cause us constant confusion and pain are not the things that are meant to be in our lives.

This is the time of year when we start consuming and accumulating in earnest. It seems like the perfect time to stop and breathe and ask: What could I be letting go of? What in my physical or emotional environment is no longer helping me move forward in my life? What might there be room for in my life if I let go of these items, this broken relationship, this disappointment, this fear?

To fill in space is a human tendency. Therefore, the important question becomes, "What do I want to fill it with? READ MORE ABOUT INFORMATION HEALTH AND NEWS CLICK HERE NOW

About the Author

Heidi DeCoux is a professional organizer & creator of The Fast-Filing Method http://unisco.co.cc/

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