Sleep on it ~

This is how it works ~

I had a problem. It was a technical problem with my writing.
In a story I was writing.

I couldn’t figure it out.
I spent the entire day trying to figure it out.
It drove me nuts.

Anyone who thinks writing is easy is not a writer.

So here’s what I did. When I went to bed, before sleep, I asked.

I asked that in the morning, I would have a clear solution to my problem.

And that’s what happened.
When I woke up, in that state when your soul is drifting back into your body after traveling all night, the problem was solved. I had the answer.

That’s how intuition works.

You have to ask – then you have to let go – and you have to not be invested in the outcome.

What does that mean – not be invested in the outcome?

It means you must not try to predict the outcome. And you must trust that no matter what answer you’re given, that it’s the right answer, no matter how wrong you might think it is.

Caroline Myss said to me: Bad things happen to good people. But what’s a bad thing? How do you know what’s a bad thing? 

Same with answers that come through intuition.
How do you know what’s the right answer or the wrong answer?

What happened when I asked, before going to sleep?
I let go my rational thought processes.
I gave it over to sleep.
And I trusted that my innate guidance system would do the work for me –
Which it did.

There’s a saying in intuition: First thought, best thought. 

It’s true.
But how often do we dismiss our first thought?
Think that it’s crazy.
And we revert to logic, or common sense.
And we do what we’ve always done in the past.
We don’t move forward.
We miss opportunities for growth.

First thought, best thought. 

Learn to trust it.
It’s your guidance –
Your Personal Guidance System.

pgs-banner-art-v11-copy

End of year audit – and hopes for next year ~

Each time this year I review what I did during the year, and whether I met my expectations.

Invariably I don’t –

This time last year, I wrote a post: All I did this year, and next ~
In that post, I stated what I wanted to achieve this year, 2016. Here’s what I wrote:

This time next year, I want to again answer the question: What did I do this year, by saying:

  • I finished my PGS film.
  • I wrote and published the 2nd part of WHITE WITCH BLACK WITCH.
  • I wrote another book on the Camino.
  • I started my Indian honour killing film.
  • I mounted a 2nd Portuguese Camino Tour.
  • I mounted a Wild Atlantic Way Tour on the west coast of Ireland.
  • I mounted a 2nd Mother Ganga Tour.
  • I began the 2nd stage of the online educational resource with QUT.
  • I set up a new film, based on the new screenplay – which in fact is about the Camino.

So how did I go?

  • I did finish my PGS film – kind of. I finished the cut, but there’s still more work to be done. So I did not achieve this goal.
  • I didn’t write and publish the second part of WHITE WITCH BLACK WITCH, and the reason is that the first book, which I self published, got picked up by Penguin Random House in a major three book deal. The first book will now be published in February 2018, with the second book six months later, and the third book another six months after that. It’s now called PALACE OF FIRES, by the way.
  • I didn’t write another book on the Camino. Nup to that one too.
  • I didn’t start my Indian honour killing film, although my producing partner Anupam Sharma and I worked hard on it, and progressed the financing.
  • I did mount another Portuguese Tour, with a group out of New Zealand. And it was wonderful. Jennifer and I made some great friends.
  • The Irish tour never happened.
  • The Mother Ganga tour did happen.
  • The online educational resource at QUT got put on hold because the Professor I’m working with had to take extended leave, for family reasons. It’s still on the burner though.
  • I am in the process of setting up a new feature film based on my Camino memoir, The Way, My Way. I now have a US sales agent / financier on board, and Screen Australia this year provided two tranches of development funding, and also provided funding for me to attend the Cannes Film Festival. I have interest from two Australian distributors.

So my strike rate wasn’t that crash hot this year, but that’s because I spent most of the year in the editing room on my PGS film. And when I wasn’t editing I was shooting.

What do I hope to achieve work-wise this coming year?

  • The feature film PGS – Intuition is your Personal Guidance System will be completed, and released.
  • I will actively market the film.
  • I will write two books associated with the film, for sale on release of the film.
  • The first two books in the Palace of Fires series will be completed and delivered to Penguin Random House.
  • The Camino film will be budgeted, scheduled, key cast will come on board and I’ll have a workable finance plan.
  • The Indian honour killing film will be set up to shoot the year after.
  • Jennifer and I will mount another Indian tour.
  • Jennifer and I will mount another German Christmas tour.

That’s about it.
That’s enough.

On a  personal level I’d like to learn how to channel.
I want to get to know my spirit guides and teachers.
I think they’d be pretty cool.

iam

Christmas Wishes to you all ~

Christmas is many things to many people.

For some, it’s parties and drinks and buying and giving presents, and time off work, and time at the beach or watching cricket or the Sydney to Hobart (if you’re in Australia!) or revelling in the snow and hot wines and hot dinners if you’re in the northern hemisphere.

It’s Christmas carols, and Christmas trees, and tinsel and turkey, and family.

For others, it’s a deeply religious and spiritual time – a celebration of the birth of an Ascended Master, of a Christ, of someone who showed us just what was possible.

For me, it’s all of the above.

I wouldn’t call myself a Christian, and yet I celebrate the arbitrary date of a very special birth – a hallowed birth. And I understand the need for myth and ritual. It’s crucial to our understanding of who we are…

I don’t ascribe to the current fashion of taking the Christ out of Christmas by saying “Happy Holidays.”  This diminishes and trivialises the sacred nature of the occasion.

I respect the HIndu holy time of Diwali, and Islam’s Ramadan – and other religious celebrations.

Through this blog I have made many friends all over the world. I feel very fortunate to know you all – and to call you a friend. Each one of you has enriched my life, and will continue to do so.

I wish you all the very best for this Christmas time – and look forward to sharing stories and feelings and provocative opinions (!) with you this coming year.

And I hope 2017 brings all you wish for…

Bill

ken-walking-with-santa

Romantic Road Tour – D10 / Munich last day…

It was the last day of our tour today.

It seems to have just whizzed by.

We spent the day casually roaming around the old part of Munich – through the Viktualienmarkt to look at the Christmas goodies on sale…

sue-in-vik-market deer-in-vik-market stall-in-vik-market

Then through some department stores to see their Christmas sections, then out into Marienplatz at 11am to look up at the Glockenspiel clock and show of moving figures that lasts more than ten minutes and captivates all the spectators way below –

glockenspeil-ws glokenspiel-closer group-watching-glockenspeil-ws angie-laughing

Then we went our separate ways – Sue and Bruce to climb tall towers, Jen and Angie to go to the magnificent Saint Michael’s church –

st-michaels-church-ws-int

It was a relaxing day once again full of wonderment and delight. It’s constantly fascinating to see how the German’s celebrate Christmas.

In the evening we went to a nearby restaurant that specialises in pork knuckle. We had a massive plate – along with dumplings, fried potatoes (in case we didn’t have enough carbs from the dumplings), sauerkraut and two token bowls of salad.

The meal was a feast.

plate-of-pork-and-veal-closer group-at-last-dinner

After dinner we wandered back to the luxurious Platzl Hotel, had some coffees, Ken and Bruce and Angie and Sue sang a version of the “Twelve Days to Christmas” song that included references to all the funny things that happened on the tour.

We videotaped it and will put it up on Vimeo later.

We said our goodbyes, sadly, because during this relatively short period we’ve had some truly wonderful and memorable experiences that will stay with us all for the rest of our lives.

three-on-road

Romantic Road Tour – D9 / New Swan Castle

Today was all about castles.

In particular, the fabled Neuschwanstein Castle, in the southern reaches of Bavaria, just near the Austrian alps.

We left our hotel early, with frost covering the windscreen again, and drove 5kms to the small village where you can park your car and walk up to the castle.

walking-up-to-castle-castle-in-distance

snowcapped-mountains-in-distance

We did the walk in minus 3-4C, so it was chilly, and the light was blue. As we climbed the winding road leading up to the castle, we caught glimpses of it through the trees.

castle-thru-trees

A backroad leading to a bridge overlooking the castle was closed, so we jumped a fence and tried to make our way down the road, but it was blocked by some tree fellers. Or tree fellas. Whichever way you want to look at it.

Bruce and Sue posed for an incriminatory shot behind the Do_Not_Cross_This_Barrier sign…

bruce-and-sue-behind-barrier-sign

Unfortunately you’re not allowed to take photos inside the castle, so to see and experience the full spectacle you have to hoof it to Germany and see it yourself – or do our Romantic Road tour next year. Yes, we are thinking of doing it again…

While waiting for the gates to open for our English speaking guided tour, Angie and Jennifer decided to do some yoga poses. This one was the Lion…

angie-jen-doing-lion angie-doing-lion jen-doing-lion

After taking these photos I required first aid…

back-of-castle

No pictures can describe the elegance or majesty or sheer grandeur of this castle. And the story of its construction, and the King who built it, would make a movie.

Speaking of movies, driving away from the castle after our visit, we passed a white church that was in the Steve McQueen movie, The Great Escape…

white-church-on-plain

how cool is that?

We’re now in Munich. We have just returned from dinner at the Hofbrauhaus – Munich’s most famous beer hall – and tomorrow is our last day of the tour.

It’s gone so damn fast, and we’ve had so many truly wonderful experiences which will turn into so many wonderful memories…

castle-in-silhouette

Romantic Road Tour – D8 / Fussen, & castle territory!

Today we arrived at the designated end of the Romantic Road, even though it’s not the end of the tour. We still have three more days.

The end of the Romantic Road is a small town in the foothills of the Alps, called Fussen. Fussen is only a short distance to the borders of Austria, Lichtenstein, and Switzerland.

It’s only a 100km drive south from Augsburg, but it’s as though we’ve driven into another country.

We stopped about 40kms out of Fussen for a coffee, and Angela rugged up. Here is a sequence of pics of Angela zipping up her jacket –

angela-jacket-5 angela-jacket-2 angela-jacket-3 angela-jacket-4

Note Angie’s eyes in this last image,

In fairness to her, this is before she had coffee….

Fussen is famous for being the stepping off point for the majestic Neuschwanstein Castle – the fairytale castle that Walt Disney fashioned his Fantasyland castle on…

It’s 6kms to the castle, and so we walked, being walkers as we are… It was overcast, but very beautiful.


sue-walking-on-track-to-castle

We caught our first glimpse of the castle through the trees… (that out of focus smudge on the mountain side in the distance is in fact one of Europe’s most beautiful castles…)

sue-photoing-castle

castle-in-distance

And an adjacent castle, Hohenschwangau… (taken later, when the sun was out, on the walk back.)

castle-on-hill-in-sunlight

 

We have tickets to visit the castle tomorrow, so today we visited the magnificent Museum of the Bavarian Kings to bone up on our history before we hit Neuschwanstein tomorrow.

museum-of-bavarian-kings

As mentioned, the sun broke through on the walk back…
lake

A couple of swans were fossicking for food by a river bank.

swans

Tonight we eat at a gorgeous local restaurant called Madam Plusch. I worry about the name. And that we might get extras with the meal…

Seeing we’re in castle land, another castle shot to finish the post!

castle-closer-through-trees

Romantic Road Tour – D7 / Augsburg

Continuing our journey down the Romantic Road in Bavaria – we are constantly knocked out by the way the Germans embrace Christmas. They do it in the smallest and grandest ways – by decorating all their windows with lights or figures of Christmas – or how the councils erect huge Christmas trees in the town squares, and deck the streets out with angel lights…

augsburg-st-night-angels

We stayed overnight in Augsburg, which is quite a large city with a bustling Christmas market. This morning though was Sunday, and things were quieter, so we headed off to one of Augsburg’s most famous attractions – the Fuggerei.

The Fuggerei is an enclave built in the sixteenth century by a wealthy merchant family – the Fuggers – who decided that they would build what was effectively the first socialised housing community.

It exists to this day – and still has residents living in it – small houses, all built the same, all operating off socialised principles.

fuggerei-walking-thru fugggerei-int-house

We then walked to lunch – to a brewery which is reputed to be one of the oldest in Germany – the Riegele Brewery built in 1386.

augsburg-brewery-ext-2

Bruce had a beer tasting –

augsburg-brewery-bruce

It didn’t take him long…

augsburg-brewery-beer-tasting-empty

I had pork loin with home made dumplings, the pork from straw pigs – which means the pigs have rooted around in straw. This somehow makes the pork loin tastier. I can attest to this.

augsburg-brewery-lunch

The brewery restaurant had a woodland theme going in the mens’ toilets…

augsburg-brewery-woodland-theme

Including a urinal embedded in a tree…

augsburg-brewery-urinal-by-tree

Good for dogs I guess…

We stumbled back to the hotel after a lunch that lasted three hours… never have a Sunday lunch in a brewery if you’re in a hurry… and then in the evening we hit the streets again.

We went to our favourite chocolate shop in all of Germany – Dichtyl’s. This time of the year they specialise in making amazing Christmas choccies…

dichtl-shelves-of-choccies dichtly-christmas-trees

We wandered outside, and heard a choir start up singing and playing Christmas Carols. We walked down the street to find high up on a balcony a traditional German band, including trumpets and harp, playing songs, with an attendant choir.

Amazing, and beautiful beyond words.

christmas-choir-on-balcony-ws christmas-choir-on-balcony-cu

We were captivated…

ken-angie-and-jen-watching-choir

On the way back to the hotel we came across a small Christmas market cum merry-go-round…

merry-go-round-park

Sue wanted a ride on the merry go round but she wasn’t allowed because it was only for children. But she twigged that parents were allowed on to supervise their kids. So she appropriated some children, pretended to be their mother, and rode around on the merry go round, waving to us as she whizzed past…

sue-on-merry-go-round

We had such fun.

This tour is turning out to be an extraordinary experience for us all… and in it being a small group we are able to take advantage of spontaneous happenings that would be more difficult with a larger group.

Each day is filled with moments of surprise and wonder. It’s sad to think that soon it will be coming to an end… but we have some magical stuff coming up in the next few days.

merry-go-round-lights santa-on-merry-go-round

Romantic Road Tour – D5+D6 / a walk in windmill woods & more…

Yesterday and today are combined because the internet where we stayed last night was sketchy –

Yesterday was another magnificent walk day; different from the other day when it was all frosty and white. This was through dark and moss covered woods, interspersed with frozen ponds and small lakes, and overseen at times by gigantic metallic wind-turbines.

Jennifer and Angie, before the walk, had stopped in at a local store and brought some Christmas accoutrements…

angie-with-santas ken-walking-with-santa

Bruce and his wife Sue are experienced walkers, and they fairly flew along the track. Bruce stopped for this portrait…

bruce-on-track

On this section of the walk the Romantic Road followed the Jakobsweg – the German Camino – so we had signs for the Romantiche Strasse alongside the familiar blue and yellow Camino scallop shell way markers.

camino-and-rr-sign

I have been trying for some time to walk on water, and yesterday I finally did it… I was so happy I did a little jig.

dancing-on-ice

Our Fitbits told us we walked about 20kms all up yesterday.

dark-woods tower couple-with-turbine

This is how big the tower is…

base-of-towerCertainly we were tired by the time we walked into Dinkelsbuhl, our home for the night, and another story-book town on the Bavarian Romantic Road.

dinkelsbuhl-at-night

We overnighted in a gorgeous hotel –

dinkelsbuhl-hotel

Angie got a nice room, for which she was appreciative…

angie-in-church

We spent this morning wandering around Dinkelsbuhl and visiting the huge church – then we drove about 35kms along the Romantic Road to Craigligen – a small town which had its Saturday morning market in full swing when we arrived.

craigligen-market

The tomatoes actually looked real…

box-of-tomatoes

And the pears had their nipples painted red…

pears-nipples

Nordlingen is another town on the Romantic Road – this one famous because it sits smack bang in the middle of a massive crater made by a meteorite that hit the earth some 15 million years ago. The church, which is the centrepiece of the walled town, is constructed from rock compressed by the blast of the meteorite so many eons ago.

We climbed 70.5m to the top of the church so that we could view the crater rim. 70.5m doesn’t seem very high when I write it, or perhaps when you read it, but man o man, it was a hefty climb up. But worth it for the view once at the top.

julie-climbing-tower

view-from-top

We then walked a half circumference of the town along the ramparts…

group-walking-ramparts

Then from Craigligen we drove to Donauworth, another Romantic Road town, where I’d reserved a table at the town’s local tavern. We noshed up on such local delicacies as roasted deer with Bavarian noodles and cranberries, (yes I know, how can we roast and eat Bambi…) and the yummiest Wiener Schnitzel with mushroom sauce, the mushrooms from the surrounding woods…

Drinks were Weissbier – sublime – and local Schwabian white and red wines, which were very drinkable.

After a long-ish lunch, we hopped in the Mercedes van again and drove to Augsburg, a large-ish city on the Romantic Road. We checked into a beautiful-ish hotel right around the corner from the Christmas Markets and the old town centre.

We spent he evening wandering through the markets, drinking variants of Gluwein.

gluwein-with-cream

int-dinkelsbuhl-church

The last two days have been quite different – yesterday a long walk that took us through pristine Bavarian woods, dotted now and again with tiny villages – and today was experiencing a Saturday in Bavaria, with a produce market and a Christmas market full of revellers.

Tomorrow we have lunch in one of the world’s oldest breweries. That lunch no doubt will be long-ish too, I’m sure!

shack-with-trees

Romantic Road Tour – D4 / Rothenburg

Today was spent in the picture postcard town of Rothenburg – or, as our wonderful friend Texan Vedic Astrologer Extraordinaire Joni Patry calls it, a “gingerbread” town.

rothenburg-town

It was a free day for those on the tour to do whatever they wanted – including:

  • A walk along the top of the town’s ancient stone ramparts, which encircle Rothenburg.

stairs-to-ramparts ken-angie-and-jen-on-ramparts

  • A visit to the magnificent German Christmas Museum

ext-christmas-shop int-christmas-museum

  • Morning tea, which included a big slosh of Amaretto in our cappuccinos.

morning-tea-cafe

  • A visit to the magnificent Kathe Wohlfahrt Christmas shop

int-christmas-shop-with-tree

  • A visit to the St. James Cathedral – an integral stop along the German Camino

angela-at-st-james-church ken-at-st-james-church bill-jen-by-st-james st-james-church

  • Lunch, of course. My meal was Wild Boar goulash with dumplings… with a Franconia Riesling.

It was a wonderful relaxing day, to be topped off by dinner at our favourite Bavarian tavern this evening.

Christmas is everywhere along the Romantic Road. And what better place to spend these pre-Christmas days than in a town like Rothenburg –

rothenburg-tower

Romantic Road Tour – D3 / a chilly walk to Rothenburg ~

Today we woke up to snow in Wurzburg .

At least we thought it was snow. It might just have been thick frost everywhere. Whatever it was, it caked the van, and took about 20 minutes to get it off the front windscreen!

van-with-snow

We drove out of town about 45 kms south along the Romantic Road to a small village, where I parked, then we headed off to walk the rest of the way into Rothenburg, a stretch of about 12kms.

It was chilly – about minus 3C – but it was breathtakingly beautiful. Later we would all agree that it was one of the most memorable walks any of us had ever done.

ken-angie-uner-tree

We didn’t see one other walker, and only one or two cars on a walk that would take us nearly four hours, what with stopping to  take photos, or to simply marvel at just how damn beautiful it was…

leaves three-figures-on-road shack

frozen-pond frozen-road

The cold didn’t bother us at all. We had a great time…

jennifer-on-frozen-high-chair

After a while we dropped down into a valley where it was warmer, passing a magnificent Bavarian country manor house –

bavarian-farmhouse

Then we climbed up again and walked into Rothenburg, into the Christmas Markets…

rothenburg-christmas-markets-night

Ken and I took a cab back to the village to retrieve the van, then we all had dinner at a gorgeous Bavarian tavern. One of our group had a half roast duck – I would have liked to have seen the whole duck because the half was HUGE…

duck

And over dinner we high-fived to a remarkable day’s walking along a frozen Romantic Road.

sue-on-snow-road-rv