![]() These should be sent to: Highways Major Projects, Gloucestershire County Council, Block 5 Floor 5, Shire Hall, Westgate Street, Gloucester, GL1 2TG. If preferred, views can be shared by writing to the council. To find out more and to have your say, view the consultation at. “I would urge businesses and residents to have their say on these proposals to help shape the future of their city.” “This route will make it easier for people to use environmentally friendly methods of transport, such as walking or cycling, which will help to create a Greener Gloucestershire. While browsing a website, facing the 406 Not Acceptable can be really annoying for visitors. Thursday 13 July between 12pm and 6pm, Fisher Room (3rd floor)Ĭllr David Gray, cabinet member responsible for environment at Gloucestershire County Council, said: “These plans would help to link key sites in the city, including Gloucestershire Royal Hospital, Gloucester Transport Hub, the university and the college, as well as retail, leisure and employers. When you access a web page through your browser ( Chrome, Edge, Brave, etc.), it interacts with the server to request the required files and contents.Tuesday 11 July between 10am and 4pm, Bluecoat Room (2nd floor).These will be held at Gloucester Guildhall, 23 Eastgate Street, Gloucester, GL1 1NS on following days: There will be two public share events providing the opportunity to view the plans and discuss them with the project team. Walking and cycling also improves the health and wellbeing of our residents. The new route will make it easier to use more sustainable modes of transport, such as walking and cycling, and help to create a Greener Gloucestershire with less reliance on vehicles, reducing carbon emissions. This will allow residents and businesses to have their say on the proposals. Work is now underway to continue the B4063 route from the M5 overbridge to Elmbridge Court roundabout.Ī consultation will launch on Monday 26 June and run for six weeks until Monday 7 August. ![]() There has been fantastic progress on this, with the new walking and cycling route completed between Arle Court roundabout in Cheltenham and the M5 overbridge at Staverton. ![]() This planned route will form part of the 26-mile cycle spine linking Stroud to Bishop’s Cleeve, via Gloucester and Cheltenham. The route will also extend between Spa Road and Llanthony Road via Gloucester Quays, over the Llanthony Lift Bridge and Gloucestershire College. The scheme would improve facilities for cyclists and pedestrians in the area, with the planned route to extend from London Road across the Junction at Black Dog Way, along Northgate Street and Southgate Street to St Ann Way. The route will also link to the B4063 Gloucester to Cheltenham cycleway which is currently under construction. Hope that’s helpful.The route will provide improved sustainable travel access through Gloucester city centre, running from the Docks in the south to London Road in the north. It is so subtle, almost unnoticeable, but in time and with practice it becomes clearer and as a result, we find it easier to let go much earlier on-perhaps avoiding the chain occurring altogether. Thoughts latch on to our neural pathways from external sources (not derived from us) and thought patterns can be changed via meditation, affirmations, etc. It feels as though we are separate from the thinking, but there is a subtle level of engagement and interest in the destination of that thought. Your thoughts is actually false, anyways. In this instance, we see the thoughts, but the momentum behind the thinking (or our unwillingness to let go of that chain of thought) is so strong that we do not step back sufficiently to note clearly and objectively. The one thing to add is the feeling that arises when we "ride" the thoughts, as you describe. By definition, we cannot be both distracted and aware at the same time. ![]() It all happens very naturally.īut noting can only happen when awareness is present. We don’t need to think about any of this in the practice itself. In that moment of awareness, the moment we realize we’ve been distracted, we use the noting to create a bit of space, as a way of letting go, and to gain some clarity and learn more about our habits, tendencies, and conditioning. We do not need to note every single thought or feeling, but simply notice when we are caught up in something so completely that we have lost our awareness of the breath or whatever the object of meditation might be. To begin with, it is important to use noting sparingly in the practice. But it is not really like this and you are quite right in saying that noting and distraction are different from each other. ![]() It is tempting to think that we have to be on guard the whole time, trying to catch every single thought. Noting is a very interesting technique and often much misunderstood. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |