Friday

Rendezvous with Freedom

It does not matter what the culture is.


It is only the feeling of vulnerability
that ever puts you
into a vibrational harmony
with that which you fear.


Once you realize that...

...
By working to achieve your feeling of Well-being,

it is then impossible for you to ever rendezvous
with anything other than Well-being.


That is the only place that freedom will ever be.


Resist Not





Rest seems like a nice contrast to overwhelm-ment.

But, enthusiasm is always chosen
 over rest.





















The only thing that ever makes you tired
or bogs you down

is
resistance.


Abraham-Hicks

Monday

Just Deal With Today


You don't have to go back
and deal with childhood issues,
because those childhood issues
produced a vibration within you
that you are still offering
-- which is producing today issues.


You can shift your vibration
a whole lot easier
when you're dealing with today issues,
than trying to deal with childhood issues.
...
It's the same vibration.


That vibration that was creating
childhood issues,
now it's creating today issues.

Deal with it in your now.
...
"Which thought feels better?
Which thought feels better?
Which thought feels better?"

Abraham-Hicks

The World as Inkblot


...from the Field Center

If you want to develop your non-local awareness,
begin approaching the world as representing
your consciousness.

For example: If a billboard catches your eye,
consider how its meaning may go beyond the obvious.

Regard it symbolically, and see if this provides
a new angle of vision or insight
into whatever’s going on in your life.



Remember, the Field is holographic.


Another idea: When you’re listening to songs, hear the lyrics
as though either you’re talking to the Field
or the Field is talking to you.



It may surprise you how directly the meaning of the words
will speak
to a specific situation you’re facing.



The key to living non-locally is to realize
that everything is metaphor,

and that nothing that gets your attention
is insignificant.



G.K. Chesterton writes that fairy tales describe apples of gold
and rivers of wine
to remind us how amazed we were the first time we discovered
that apples were red and rivers ran with water.

The ability to see the world as metaphor, with new eyes,
marks a return to innocence and receptivity
that can never be experienced
within the endless replay of old conclusions.

The world is new each moment.

The only question is, do we have the eyes to see,
and the ears to hear?