rene Posted September 3, 2016 I share with your perspective -- and without cognitive dissonance. Yeppers, totally. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
cold Posted September 3, 2016 May I have a cake? And eat it too? When does the cake become me?  What if I give the cake away? A tasty healthy organic squash & chocolate cake. I the donor want to lose 10 pounds of weight (only 25 to go and reach that goal).  The person receiving the cake is celebrating an occasion. Happy to enjoy the cake. After all food is love! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wu Ming Jen Posted September 3, 2016 Giving is having an abundance of tomatoes. It is tomato season after all . Â If you do not lock your car doors where I live it will be filled with tomatoes. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DreamBliss Posted September 4, 2016 And there are the Ten Thousand Things and a tomato is one of them. Â I could make a lot of spaghetti with 10,000 tomatoes... Â Â 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DreamBliss Posted June 25, 2017 Here's a quote from, "Emmanuel's Book" by Pat Rodegast that I think provides another perspective on this: Â "The way to transform violence back into the beautiful Light force that it truly is is the exquisite task of seeing violence not as it presents itself, but as the force that it will ultimately become. There is a key here for all of you: see even in the most despicable the Divine quality that has become distorted. Â What would violence be in its Divine state before it has been twisted into vicious aggression? It is the power to stand and to speak and to witness to a deep faith in the Light. Â Violence is a form of witnessing to, but it is witnessing to distortion rather than to truth. There is courage in violence. Don't forget that for one moment. It is stepping out, going beyond the 'shoulds' and 'shouldn'ts.' It is saying, 'I exist and I must be seen." Hear that in the context of spiritual teaching and you will find the means by which violence can be transformed within yourself and therefore within the world. Â Murder, violence, cruelty, visciosness, wickedness - yes this all exists just as kindergarten exists before first grade. Violence is painful for you who look from a level beyond (not better than but certainly wiser that), and see with the anguish the anguish that creates the anguish. Â Do not be afraid of terror. Do not react violently to violence. Do not feel pain abut pain. By doing so, you perpetuate what you are seeking to avoid. When you pass judgement on such things you are limiting God's reality to your human understanding. Â From where you sit, there is right and wrong and from where I sit, there is truth. Many in your human world might relish what punishment may come to the murderer as he enters into another life to atone for his violence. Yet you cannot judge that. You can only bless and pray and open and trust." Â I take away two things from this. Having and Giving are the same energy, but with different focuses. I am still wrapping my head around that. Â The other thing that I have been saying for some time now is that resistance to something only makes it stronger. Focus on what is not wanted only perpetuates whatever what is not wanted. I have picked this up through a variety of books and teachings, including LoA, and my own contemplation. It is interesting to see it verified here, in a book written so long ago that I am not sure many are aware of. It is a wonderful, loving text and I highly recommend it. Â What are your thoughts on this? Â Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Marblehead Posted June 25, 2017 Yes, violence is the same energy that would be used to help someone who is in need. The energy is simply applied differently.  I still don't have a good handle on "having and giving is the same energy" but if we look at it from the perspective of a bellows, each time we give we regain what we give. Hard to apply in only the manifest.    Share this post Link to post Share on other sites