Letter E

The Power of Speech; particularly the speaking voice; sound, words and language; self-expression; intellect.  Curious, clever, changeable, creative and gregarious.

The 5th Letter of the Alphabet. Energy Frequency No. 5. (including matrix suggestions and my own musings) The Expressive (Creative) Force of the Universal Love Essence through human embodiment.  Governs the throat generally, (voice, speech, sound, song), ears, the 3rd-Ear (the ability to hear the inner-sounds, songs and tones).  Also has remarkable power to discharge and heal intense and overwhelming emotions. (How this relates to “E” the 5th Letter will be discussed under the “Letter-Number Table 5.” – on the Header Menu Bar – yet to be added.)
Also:-
To begin to cultivate Infinite Love Energy, go to Meditations (and practice Part 1. 2 & 3)

“E’s” enjoy learning and expressing themselves in the company of others. As the second vowel, it represents Spirit’s need to freely (and audibly) communicate.

With “E” (or “E’s”) in a name, you can bet on a lively mind, avid curiosity, sometimes a chatter-box, or – that a very specific something wants to be experienced and “voiced” in that person’s life (the letters next to, or following the “E” will give a hint as to what the special something might be).

Parents and educators (of “E” children) might carefully watch the child’s interests, and rather than propel them into a “safe” or reasonable career, allow them the room and permission to investigate their options freely.  When true interests are honored, the universe always opens a way for their expression.

“E” may stay with the obvious idea of ‘voice’ and be primarily enchanted with speaking, singing, writing, working in the media, or even studying foreign languages to aid a specialized career – but there are other kinds of voices!

“A picture speaks a thousand words.” “E” artists, sculptors, painters, musicians and photographers speak to the world through their creations; dancers and musicians ‘talk’ with their instruments and bodies – who can forget the voice, songs, and gyrating hips of Elvis Presley? (Note the three “E’s” in his name!)

With language in particular, “E’s” (like “C’s”), can’t stand to be misquoted or misunderstood.  Most speak fluently and always seem to find the right word or phrase, but weak “E’s” need help in developing verbal skills.  Then again, some tend to talk too much rather than too well – and suffer from “diarrhea of the mouth.” Think of the last time you were exhausted by someone’s incessant and inane chattering – check if they had an “E” at the beginning or middle of any of their names, or just a lot of “E’s” scattered throughout their names – if it’s a wedded-woman, check her Maiden name!!

The exceptions: the magical, hypnotic story-tellers, who charm us as they spin their marvelous yarns.  My late husband had one such friend (named “Eric”); his non-stop talking bordered on the marathon.  When this gentleman got going, he would hold forth without pause into the wee-hours of the morning – long past the time the rest of us needed to be asleep.  In desperation, I would sneak away to bed leaving the men behind – my husband barely awake in his chair, helpless yet spellbound, with Eric striding around the kitchen, gesticulating (drink in hand) to make a point – and barely pausing between his words to sip his beer!

Balanced “E:” has the gift of knowing the information that someone else can comfortably receive – and not assuming what they need to or should hear!!  (Such insights, the product of superconscious or higher Mind, bypass the conditioned, judgmental outer-intellect); equally skilled in listening as in talking they usually exhibit excellent negotiating skills and realize that most people don’t think alike.  As masters in the art of true communication, their perceptions and insights entrain them directly with other minds.

Mental entrainment: ability to enter a similar mind-mode with someone else – even another life-form, and to know exactly what they think, and why!  This requires inner-listening and receptivity, then it’s possible (when appropriate), to link to the higher Mind of the other person; this faculty can also access the group consciousness of larger audiences.

Unbalanced “E:” unable to understand other minds; have no idea that other minds can be vastly different and only think and communicate from their own limited standpoint; may remain aggravatingly fussy, mentally compulsive and locked into old thought patterns; find listening to others (instead of talking) difficult; often don’t really ‘hear’ what’s being said to them; will chatter out of insecurity (or just for the sake of hearing themselves talk).

Weak “E’s” hate being alone and frequently nourish themselves on the captive energy of unwilling audiences!  After intense mental stimulation, they find it impossible to turn-off their thoughts and often can’t unwind enough to fall asleep at night; they need constant mental stimulation and being in their own company with no one to talk to almost terrifies them – their poor sense of identity needs another voice to make them feel “real;” often you can’t get them off the phone plus their radio or the TV stays on all night! – blunting the edge of intolerable loneliness.

Ineffectual “E’s” neglect their mental potential and remain scattered and non-productive.

The more “E’s” you have, the more you are being called upon to truly understand how others think – try listening each time before you talk – listen to the words your intuitive higher-Mind gives you to speak as you express yourself to others and also, begin to pursue your considerable creative talents.

When “E” is in YOUR NAME: it’s how you use your voice, your curiosity and your self-expression.

SUMMARY: words, speech, “quicksilver” thoughts; higher-mind; need for constant mental stimulation; desire to express freely – especially verbally; media skills (broad-casting, writing, interviewing); creative, curious, artistic, scattered, gregarious.

Some Famous “E” Names: The voice, speech and words; curiosity, the intellect and self-expression. (Note all the extra “E’s” most of these names have!)

Eleanor Roosevelt: wife of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 32nd U.S. president; Influential American First Lady and national figure from the 30′s to the 60′s; independent, intellectual, social advocate; author; diplomat; early spokes-person for women’s equality; gifted speaker-lecturer. Albert Einstein: brilliant German born U.S. physicist; Nobel Prize winner; transformed our understanding of space and time with his general and special theories of relativity. Thomas Alva Edison:  U.S. inventor most responsible for bringing electric light to the world; created first electric power plant; amongst hundreds of his inventions: the carbon telephone transmitter; the phonograph; the first incandescent lamp with carbon filament. George Eastman: U.S. business man, inventor; gave the world the modern photographic industry; ground breaking inventions included: Kodak box camera, flexible film, a process for color photography. Edgar Bergen: popular early radio and stage ventriloquist; and his dummy Charlie McCarthy; his non-stop verbal act delighted thousands.Elvis Presley: charismatic singer, musician, actor; the eternal “voice” and “King” of Rock-and-Roll, immortalized in his home-museum-shrine Graceland and through countless films and records. Eugene Gladstone O’Neill: U.S. playwright; winner of Nobel Prize for literature, most famous plays: Mourning Becomes Electra and Long Day’s Journey into Night. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Poet, essayist, lecturer, transcendentalist philosopher; most famous American writer and thinker of the 19th Century; greatly influenced European as well as U.S. thought; his first book Nature portrayed his philosophy of life and an understanding of the mystical union of nature. Sergei Eisenstein: (five “E’s”) pioneer Russian film director; famous for many early silent films, notably Strike, Battleship Potemkin, October. Ernest Miller Hemingway: renown U.S. novelist; Nobel Prize for literature winner, soldier, war correspondent, big-game fisherman, hunter, world traveler, wrote down his adventures in his novels; most notable works: The Sun Also Rises; For Whom the Bell Tolls and The Old Man of the Sea. Edward Murrow: outstanding American broadcast journalist. Elton John: popular British pianist, singer, rock and pop composer; wrote music for film and stage versions of The Lion King; broke ceremonial precedent by playing and singing his rewritten “Candle in the Wind 1997″ – to honor Princess Dianna at her funeral in Westminster Abbey, London 1997. Ella Fitzgerald: America’s golden-voiced “First Lady of Jazz;” widely regarded as world’s finest female Jazz singer.

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