Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Yves Saint Laurent 'Temps Majeur' Serum

Ganoderma is becoming more popular by the day. Its anti-aging properties are so well-known that even Yves Saint Laurent is offering a Ganoderma 'Temps Majeur' Serum.' The kicker? It's in a 1oz bottle, and it's $225! Here is what Yves Saint Laurent says about Ganoderma:

"For the first time ever, Yves Saint Laurent introduces a revolutionary skincare innovation: a serum with double concentration of the 'mushroom of eternal youth.' This powerful mushroom, Ganoderma lucidum, is a rare ingredient known for its exceptional regenerating properties. Day after day, wrinkles appear smoothed out and skin appears more firm, dense and nourished for an exceptional, youthful radiance.
  • 1 oz.
  • By Yves Saint Laurent."

I'm glad to announce that Organo Gold carries a personal care line, which consists of: OG Smile Toothpaste, the G3 soap, and the new addition to the personal care line, the Velvet Ganoderma Lotion. Even at the retail price, if all 3 of these products were purchased, you'd still be paying much less than $225.






 The OG Smile toothpaste is Fluoride-free, contains 100% certified organic Ganoderma, has a lovely minty taste, and is available for $21 retail or $14 at the Preferred Customer wholesale price.





The G3 soap contains Glutathione, Grapeseed and Ganoderma Lucidum Extract and comes with 3 bars of soap! Glutathione is said to be a powerful antioxidant and "many longevity scientists believe that the level of glutathione in our cells is predicative of how long we will live." Grapeseed extract's "antioxidant properties are considered to be stronger than those of vitamin C and Vitamin E." Combining these two antioxidents with Ganoderma makes for a powerful trio, and the price is right: $36 retail or $24 at the Preferred Customer wholesale price (or between $12 per bar, retail and $8 per bar at wholesale).






The OG Velvet lotion is the new addition to the Personal Care line and much more affordable than its $225 cousin: $28.50 retail or $19 at the Preferred Customer wholesale price.

I am so excited that Yves Saint Laurent is charging $225 for their serum. They see the value in this powerful mushroom known as reishi. However, I am glad to announce that you won't have to "pay through the nose" to get access to this fabulous herb. As always, you can purchase any of these products and more via my online store at Cafe Afrodite.



Cafe Afrodite
www.cafeafrodite.com
Twitter: @CafeAfrodite
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CafeAfrodite

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Coffee: The Basics


Having an Experience with Coffee

Coffee, like wine, is a world full of intricate details, history & wonder. There are many things the coffee connoisseur should consider: aroma, acidity; Turkish, French Press; medium dark roast, dark roast, light roast. It wasn’t until I started my own coffee business that I began to notice how much went into the average cup of coffee. The coffee berry has a long, and at times, revolutionary history, starting in Yemen around the year 850CE and finally finding its way to the United States in 1723. For example, coffee was considered a “Muslim drink” and banned from use in many religious communities. In Paul Revere’s day, he and his friends would meet at the local Coffee Houses where they would plan the moves that led to the American Revolution. Coffee Houses were then thought of as places where the rebellious met, and were banned. Currently, coffee is the 2nd largest traded commodity in the world, bringing in a total of $90 billion in annual sales. Recession, depression and all that goes between, whether purchased from Starbucks or Dunkin Donuts, people will “need” their coffee and will pay upwards of $5 a cup to have it. What’s the history on this very popular bean?

Although no one can say for sure how long coffee has been around, the earliest mention of the coffee berry goes back to 850CE in Yemen, where it was first cultivated. From there, the coffee bean traveled to ancient Arabia where the term “Arabica” was coined to describe the bean grown in the region. Although there are a few different types of coffee berries, the main two categories are Arabica & Robusta. Arabica & Robusta beans account for over 90% of the coffee beans cultivated and sold around the world. Coffea Arabica must grow at high altitudes in equatorial countries in order to grow properly. The Arabica bean is sensitive & much more susceptible to disease & changes in the climate, which is why it is considered “gourmet” or “premium.” Arabica plants have lower yields, but are known for their smooth taste, containing half the amount of caffeine found in Robusta beans.
Robusta plants produce more beans, are less difficult to harvest, have less flavor and twice the caffeine found in the Arabica beans. Robusta coffee accounts for most of the coffee available in the supermarkets.

Aside from Robusta & Arabica, there are other types of coffee beans and flavors to try such as: Kona, Sumatra, Yirgacheffe and others. In order to really taste the difference between the different types of coffee beans and how they’re grown, things to look for and experiment with are flavor, aroma, body, and acidity. So for example, the Arabica variety is less acidic while the Robusta is more acidic & full bodied. Also, depending on how long the beans are roasted, the coffee could have less or more caffeine, aroma, & oil. This depends largely on how the coffee is ground and brewed. Finely ground coffee beans are known as “Turkish” while the most coarsely ground bean is the “French Press.” The common grind is in between the two extremes—Turkish & French Press—and is known as the “Common Grind.”

Coffee is a plant that requires a lot of water in order to grow properly. It can take as many as 37 gallons of water to grow the beans needed to produce one cup of coffee. However, with programs like Starbuck’s “Grounds For Your Gardens” or a community program known as “Ground to Ground,” every coffee consumer can do his or her part by repurposing their coffee grounds. Worms and acid-loving plants, such as blueberries, can benefit greatly from acid-rich coffee grounds being used as mulch.

There is still much debate on whether coffee is good or bad for overall health. Many say that coffee & caffeine products alike should be avoided while some believe coffee can help us live longer (http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2012/05/16/152835058/can-coffee-help-you-live-longer-we-really-want-to-know). There are also those who say that coffee does not help or hurt health. Is coffee good for you, bad for you? My answer is, “it depends.” Most experts will agree that coffee is acidic and depending on the acid tolerance, diet, and pH of the individual, could do serious damage over time; however, what if there’s a coffee available that doesn’t negatively affect the pH balance of the individual drinking it? Such a brand does exist! For more information on this brand, feel free to contact me on Twitter at @CafeAfrodite with any questions.

Happy Coffee Trails to you,

Cafe Afrodite
www.cafeafrodite.com
Twitter: @CafeAfrodite
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CafeAfrodite

When's the last time Starbucks paid you to drink coffee or tea?



I was having a conversation with my sister, an ex-Starbucks junky, when she shocked me by sharing her reasons for getting angry every time she would set foot in the coffee house. In her words, "It used to irritate me that while I would give my money to them, I was getting nothing in return but a coffee high and extra calories!" I began laughing hysterically. I knew exactly what she meant.

When you really think about it, when was the last time Starbucks, Dunkin Donuts, or any other coffee company sent you a check for referring or drinking their coffee? Sure, you may get a discount after you've purchased so many beverages, but that's not money in your pocket. Organo Gold makes it possible for you to: 1) Get coffee, tea, and other Organo Gold products at a discount, sometimes as low as half off; and, 2) Earn retail profits and referral bonuses, even as a customer!

How does it work? Let's say you decide to be a Preferred Customer, which is a one-time membership fee of $49.95 for a year, and you love the coffee or tea. Each time you order, instead of paying $30 for a box of coffee, you'd pay $17. Now let's say one of your friends tries it, loves it, and wants to know where to get it. Since you're a Preferred Customer, you can make the order from your Customer website at the $17 price and charge the retail price of $30, or less, or more! And just that easily, the box of coffee you purchased just paid for itself.

Let's say a few months later, your friend and her friends love the coffee so much that they'd like to invest in the business for themselves. Depending on which package they sign up for, you would receive a referral bonus of either $20, $80, or $150, even though you are just a customer yourself. It's that simple.

If you love coffee or tea, why not let your coffee or tea addiction pay for itself instead of giving your money away and seeing no return? To find out more information on how the coffee that pays can work for you, feel free to contact me via Twitter or email me at brianna at cafeafrodite dot com with questions. As always, you can keep it even simpler by being a retail customer and purchase from my online store at Cafe Afrodite.




Cafe Afrodite
www.cafeafrodite.com
Twitter: @CafeAfrodite
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CafeAfrodite

Give your face a dose of Green Tea!


 I must say that I think the Green Tea is FABULOUS, so when I heard Holistic Healthcare Practitioner, Marianne Noad discussing the benefits of using ganoderma-infused Organo Gold Green Tea on the face and body, I was overjoyed! All you need is: water, Organo Gold Green Tea, & a spray bottle. You can purchase a spray bottle at your local dollar store, and of course, the tea & coffee can be purchased via my online store at Cafe Afrodite.

Instructions for Green Tea Spray:

1- Boil 1.5 cups of water in a pot
2- After the water reaches boiling, take it off the stove
3- Add the Organo Gold Green Tea bag to the pot
4- Let the Green Tea steep for at least 10 minutes or as long as desired
5- Refrigerate the Green Tea until it is at the desired temperature
6- Put the Green Tea in a Spray bottle and spray it on your face or anywhere that is irritated.


Here is a Blog Talk Radio session with Marianne Noad where she discusses how the Green Tea works. You can fast forward to 19:30 to get straight to the Green Tea information. Here's the link for those who prefer to copy and paste:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/ogradio/2012/01/26/organo-gold-health-care-call--1000pm-est-900pm-cst



Cafe Afrodite
www.cafeafrodite.com
Twitter: @CafeAfrodite
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CafeAfrodite

Sunday, May 13, 2012

"What Love Is Not" an Excerpt

This excerpt is from Chapter 4 of "Buddhism in a New Light."


“What Love Is Not”

Buddhism In A New Light



“Love is not love” (Sonnet 116). As Shakespeare writes, what seems to be love may not be love at all. As much as the subject of love occupies many people’s minds (and perhaps much of their time and money), their greatest concern appears to be confined to finding love or becoming loveable in the eyes of others, rather than the meaning of love or the capacity for loving.

The underlying assumption of this attitude may be that love is a feeling of pleasure and comfort stimulated only be an external object. The usual remedy for life without love, therefore, is to find someone new and better.

Erich Fromm, a noted psychologist and social philosopher, considers love an art that ‘requires knowledge and effort’; he defines love as “the active concern for the life and the growth of that which we love” (The Art of Loving, pp 1,25). If love is one’s capacity to wish and act for the happiness and freedom of another person, a fundamental solution to the suffering of love must be sought not outward but in the development of the character and inner strength that make us capable of loving more genuinely and powerfully.



Mastering the Art of Loving

One of the greatest obstacles to the joy of loving is our desire for control. People sometimes mistake their wish to control others for loving concern. They may think of themselves as affectionate, yet their “love” may be a disguised desire to manipulate others for personal gain. In his writings, Nichiren Daishonin often uses a mythic Buddhist creature called the devil king of the sixth heaven as a metaphor for the deep-seated human desire to control others. Indeed, another name for this devil king literally means the “heavenly being who makes free use of others.” Through his lively descriptions of this devil, Nichiren indicates the importance of becoming aware and vigilant of our desire to use others as a means to our selfish ends.

Since dependency is essential to control, the devil king uses various schemes to make people dependent on him. One of his main tools to encourage dependency is manipulation through feigned affection. Despite the general perception of the devil king as a fierce monster, he is adept at appearing affectionate. To lure people and keep them under his control, the devil king is said to make himself look like a Buddha or parent.

For example, Nichiren writes, “The devil king of the sixth heaven is endowed with the Buddha’s thirty-two features and manifests the Buddha’s body (GZ, 114). He also quotes from a Buddhist commentary, which states, “So long as a person does not try to depart from the sufferings of birth and death and aspire to the Buddha vehicle, the devil will watch over him like a parent” (WND, 770). In fact, there is even a type of devil in the Buddhist tradition called “the devil of compassion” (GZ, 526).

Those who are eager to control others often appear affectionate with the aim of keeping others dependent materially or emotionally. In Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House, the seemingly affectionate yet controlling husband Torvald Helmer reminds his wife, Nora, of his “love” expressed in the form of financial support: “My pretty little pet is very sweet, but it runs away with an awful lot of money. It’s incredible how expensive it is for a man to keep such a pet.”



The Truth of Love

It is easy to mistake control & dependency for love. The appearance of selfish love, like that of the devil king’s, is deceptive, for it’s selfishness does not show as long as the recipient of such a feigned affection remains submissive. As Nichiren points out, the devil king is affectionate “so long as a person does not try to depart from” his control. Some people may give anything to their “loved ones” only to keep them dependent.

Those obsessed with control, however, usually find it difficult to wish for the genuine happiness and independence of others. Instead, they hope to see others deprived in one way or another in order to maintain their sense of superiority and control. As Nichiren writes, “The nature of this devil king is to rejoice at those who create the karma of the three evil paths and to grieve at those who form the karma of the three good paths.”

The test of our love, in this sense, lies in our sincerity to encourage and work for the self-reliance and freedom of our loved ones. Those who thrive on domination may easily show pity for others in suffering, while inwardly delighting at the sight. The misery of others affords those in control yet another opportunity to show their superiority and thereby remind those suffering of their need for dependency.

At the core of a relationship built on domination and submission lies a profound sense of insecurity and powerlessness on both sides. Those who like to dominate cannot accept their existence on their own, so they must derive a sense of power by subjugating others. Similarly, those who easily submit to an external authority cannot see their self-worth, so they feel compelled to become part of someone “better” and stronger by abandoning their identity and integrity.

To such submissive people, control means protection against their own insecurity. Those submissive to an external authority do not see their lives as worthwhile, no can they endure the emptiness of having no one for whom to live. Instead, they must seek an external object with which to merge their identity to avoid facing the weakness and emptiness of their lives.

This symbiotic relationship between the dominant and submissive is disturbed when the submissive party uncovers his or her self-worth and develops the inner strength to become independent. Then the dominant party’s insecurity will surface as frustration and anger.

Nichiren’s following descriptions illustrate the devil kind’s intense fear and anxiety in this regard: “When we thus draw near to achieving Buddhahood…the devil king of the sixth heaven, lord of the threefold world, reasons: ‘If these persons should become Buddhas, I will suffer loss on two counts. First of all, if they free themselves from the threefold world, they will escape my control. Second, if they become Buddhas, their parents and siblings will also depart from the saha world. How can I stop this from happening?’” “When an ordinary person of the latter age is read to attain Buddhahood…this devil is great surprised. He says to himself, ‘This is most vexing. If I allow this person to remain in my domain, he not only will free himself from the sufferings of birth and death, but will lead others to enlightenment as well. Moreover, he will take over my realm and change it into a pure land. What shall I do?’”



To Love Truly

The devil king does not want anyone to attain enlightenment and become free since that would be a painful reminder of his own powerlessness and dependency. The paradox of this devil king, who “dwells at the summit of the world of desire and rules over the threefold world” is that he is controlled by his own desire to control. The devil king is a ruler who cannot rule himself. The more control he has, the more of it he needs. He is perpetually driven by his inner weakness and insecurity, never feeling satisfied. He is a prisoner of the prison he himself creates. Although he is said to make “free use of others,” he is never free in the innermost reality of his life. The devil king, therefore, is incapable of loving.

The devil king is said to dwell in the sixth and highest heaven of the world of desire, but his “love” results only in profound unfulfilmment and suffering beneath its heavenly pleasure. As William Blake knew, such selfish “love seeketh only Self to please,/To bind another to Its delight:/Joys in another’s loss of ease,/And builds a Hell in Heavens despite” (“The Clod & Pebble,” The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake, David V. Erdman, ed., p. 19).

To love truly, we must be free. To be free, then, we must discover our innate self-worth. In Shakespeare’s sonnet quoted earlier, he also wrote, “Let me not to the marriage of true minds/Admit impediments.” One of the greatest impediments to our ability to live is delusion about the truth of our inner life—Buddhahood. Such delusion leads to powerlessness and dependency. The mythic devil king is symbolic of this delusion. As Nichiren writes, “The fundamental darkness manifests itself as the devil king of the sixth heaven.” To shed light on this fundamental darkness through strengthening our confidence in Buddhahood, then, is an essential practice for the art of loving. (From the December 7, 2001, World Tribune).