The quality of events surrounding you in any given moment in time may be reflecting specific beliefs that you hold in that moment of time.
How do humans treat one another under the stress of a changing world? Do we fight and compete? Or, do we cooperate and work together as a family in this world to get through these changes? This is the question we are asking ourselves today.
To heal the ancient battle between darkness and light, we may find that it’s less about defeating one or the other, and more about choosing our relationship to both.
Through our thanks, we honor all possibilities and bring the ones we choose into this world.
War is not human nature. It is a habit.
Manifestation begins with the willingness to make room in our beliefs for something that supposedly doesn’t exist. We create that “something” through the force of consciousness and awareness.
In the teachings of Mahayana Buddhism, it’s believed that reality can exist only where our mind creates a focus.
It’s all about our power to focus consciousness, which is the great secret of some of our most ancient and cherished traditions.
Man did not weave the web of life – he is merely a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself.”1.
Ancient spiritual traditions remind us that in each moment of the day, we make the choices that either affirm or deny our lives. Every second we choose to nourish ourselves in a way that supports or depletes our lives; to breathe deep and life-affirming breaths or shallow, life-denying ones; and to think and speak about other people in a manner that is honoring or dishonoring.
In a participatory universe of our making, why should we expect it to be difficult to have the power to create?
I’ve written this book for one reason: to offer a sense of hope, possibility, and empowerment in a world that often makes us feel small, ineffective, and helpless.
We’re “part of a universe that is a work in progress.” In this unfinished creation, “we are tiny patches of the universe looking at itself – and building itself.
When we look at our lives from the viewpoint that everything is everywhere all the time, the implications are so vast that for many they’re hard to grasp.
In our beliefs about who we are, what we have and don’t have, and what should and shouldn’t be, we breathe life into our greatest joys as well as our darkest moments.
Because it’s impossible to sustain enough energy to keep all of them going forever, eventually they collapse into a single state – the most stable one, which we see as our “reality.
Through the power of our forgotten inner technology, we can heal, bilocate, be everywhere at once, remote-view, connect telepathically, choose peace, and do everything in between.
We’re creators – and even more than that, we’re connected creators.
I have one small drop of knowing in my soul. Let it dissolve in your ocean. – Rumi.
The pilot of any plane will agree that when an aircraft is flying with the currents of the atmosphere, the time to get from one place to another can be much shorter. However, when the plane is flying against the flow, it endures a rough ride, and wind resistance can add hours to the flight.