By
Jack Clarke
It’s people taking conscious responsibility for their own lives,
not blaming others for their problems.
It’s people who deliberately decide to learn and grow.
Its people committed to win/win rather than win/lose - who don’t have to be
right except for themselves.
It’s people seeing problems as lessons, perhaps in a long series of problems and
lessons.
It’s people who believe we are what we think we are, and can change ourselves by
changing our thinking.
It’s people that feel they can change the world by changing themselves, not by
trying to change others.
It’s people who search for strength from the universe by going inside
themselves.
It’s people that recognise love doesn’t have to have conditions attached.
It’s people loving and knowing themselves in order to better know and love
others.
It’s people who see others not ‘better than’ nor ‘less than’, but rather
‘different than’ themselves - yet part of the same whole.
It’s people who choose their own path rather than follow dogma.
It’s people honouring your right to your own path, not theirs.
It’s people who realise that now is all we have, since yesterday is just a
thought and so is tomorrow.
It’s people interested in owning themselves rather than things.
It’s people who see joy in life rather than pain, having experienced enough pain
already.
It’s people curious about extra sensory perception and all it implies.
It's people in all walks of life, from business persons to flower essence
healers, psychologists to UFO investigators.
New Age is not a new religion with hierarchy of priests and rituals, seeking
converts - though some new agers choose some ritual.
New Age is not often about gloom and doom, though many are concerned about
ecology, the economy and other forces that effect our world.
New Age is not a movement built on guilt, anger, fear or hurt; it is a journey
toward the love that is God.
New Age is not allegiance to one master; it is learning from many masters in the
quest for the oneness of God.