Friday, September 10, 2010

Mind Syntropy Users Blogs

Tags >> Spirituality
Jan 19
2010

Surrender Guilt

Posted by cbaxley in surrender , Spirituality , happiness , David Hawkins

cbaxley

"There is no this causing a that" therefore it is not your fault.

Guilt is coming from an opinion that somehow the situation could
have been different, which it could not have... "Everything is arising of its own".

Surrender "feeling guilty is wrong" it is also arising of its own.
"Surrender everything as it arises".
 
Judging that the feeling is somehow improper takes us out of the "crest of the wave". All is perfection(God) even events that appear tragic.

This is how I use the teachings when such an event arises.

Love,
Clint

Dec 16
2009

Caring, loving what's the difference?

Posted by cbaxley in Spirituality , miracles , love , healing , happiness

cbaxley

When I start to distinguish the differences between caring and loving with people they at first think they are the same thing. The programming that we received was that our parents were punishing us because they loved us. "This will hurt me more than it will you" never really jived with me as a child. We were taught that caring was showing love.

I can begin by giving  a definition of the two in such a way as to show the differences.

Caring is based in the belief that the world is dangerous and that there is something to protect ourselves from. It is always seeing dangers and boogey men around the next corner. It is constantly calculating the next "bad" thing that will happen and attempting to stop it. Caring projects an unconscious fear onto whatever is cared about. Caring is selfish and wants to keep what it has. All judgment in caring is from that the point of view that the thing cared about is weak and cannot care for itself. YOU MUST MAKE THE THING CARED ABOUT A VICTIM BEFORE YOU CAN CARE ABOUT IT! Caring always uses contraction and less movement (death) as a solution for the thing cared for. Caring always feels bad and extends bad feelings to others even though it gives the appearance of being a "kind" or "good" person. It is totally inauthentic. Caring is possessive, arrogant, fearful, judgmental, controlling, forcing and restricting.

Love on the other hand is based in the belief that the world is safe and that there is nothing to protect ourselves from. It always sees the world as benign and perfect. It is constantly seeing the "good" side in everything. It allows for maximum movement and ability in the thing loved. Loving never is possessive. Loving allows anything to happen to itself or others. Loving is generous because loves' world is generous to it. Love totally realizes that it does not know what is best for anyone and so assumes that what is happening is best for everyone involved. Love assumes strength in everything that it encounters and gives strength and encouragement to the strength and possibility in the thing encountered. Love always feels good and extends that feeling to everything. Love is expansive. Love does not pretend to be kind to people, it is a natural occurrence for those around it that the loving person is kind. Loving does not worry about "what people will think" it allows for people to have all points of view. Love can "be with" anything. Love is powerful because it is the source of all power.

Dec 16
2009

What is meant by the term "mystic"

Posted by cbaxley in Spirituality , Mystic , David Hawkins

cbaxley

On page 132 of I, Reality and Subjectivity, the following question and answer can be found. 

Q. What is meant by the term "mystic"? 

A. The mystic knows, experiences, and identifies with the Self as both context and content, that is, context is content. The content of the ego is transitory and a product of perception and, like a movie, it has no independent existence. The content of perception is an automatic byproduct of positionality and goes hand in hand with the creation of the illusions of perception. Science is the authority of the linear domain and the Newtonian paradigm; the mystic is the authority of the nonlinear domain.

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