Spiritual Protection
by Rev. Judith A. Baldwin
This excerpt from the forthcoming book on
the subject of spiritual protection is reprinted here with permission. It was
also included as Appendix B in
Healing Lost Souls by William J. Baldwin.
Spirit Releasement Therapy / Past Life Therapy / Recovery of Soul Fragmentation /
Birth Regression / Spiritual Protection / UFO Contact and Abduction /
Spiritual Immune System / Spiritual Gifts of Discernment
When I am lecturing or teaching, the most
frequently asked questions are about how to protect ourselves from interfering
entities and destructive energies. In my experience, spiritual protection is a
way of life. It is not enough to practice techniques, or to rely on ritual or
ceremony. For at the end of these, too often there is still the fear to face.
What is needed is a practical means of living in a state of invulnerability,
regardless of the unexpected, and in spite of the unknown.
Spiritual protection is like a great
cathedral built over time. First we lay in place the keystones of spiritual
invulnerability. then we carefully build the archway to spiritual adeptness.
Finally, after much practice, spiritual invulnerability is in place and we are
ever aware of it.
To be invulnerable requires that we become
spiritually adult, as opposed to remaining spiritually childish. though this is
not a particularly complex task, it can seem demanding, probably because most of
us would rather be cared for than to care for ourselves. Fortunately,
responsibility for keeping the Spiritual Immune System healthy belongs with
oneself, and therefore something can be done about it. In fact being spiritually
adult looks a lot like a life well lived.
It may help to think of interfering
entities and destructive energies as "spiritual bacteria." One is not upset by
the idea that the bacteria which plague the physical body must be controlled by
daily hygiene. We neither resist nor hide from this reality, we simply bathe,
shampoo and brush regularly. Why then should we be threatened by the reality
that we must also perform spiritual hygiene to keep ourselves from being
overcome by opportunistic spiritual bacteria?
Let us look closely at how we see
ourselves. When you picture yourself do you see a body? When you think of being
safe or protected do you mean keeping the physical body safe? When you worry
about your loved ones, are you imagining bodily harm? If "yes" is the answer
these questions, you have spiritual homework to do.
We begin our remedial work in primary
spiritual education with this realization. No matter what, even if we are
sleeping or standing still, we are never guaranteed that the body will not be
injured, or sicken, or die in the next moment. If one of the great oaks that
surround this building falls onto the roof while I am writing this, it is likely
I would be injured or even killed.
No matter how carefully we tend to our
physical well being, sooner or later all bodies end. This is a fact that we must
reckon with : bodies cannot be saved, not our own and not our beloved family or friends.
At any time, any experience can end the body, and imprint or scar the soul.
The only indisputable guarantee is that
the spirit, the original identity, will always be perfectly safe. No matter what
happens to the body or the soul, the spirit remains unaffected and undamaged.
For we who do not yet know ourselves as spirit, who think of ourselves as body
and soul, this premise may seem strange, even threatening.
The fact that we are anxious and
preoccupied with our physical safety is telling. It speaks volumes about our
lack of experience as spiritual beings. It points out that we are most aware of
ourselves as physical bodies, rather than spirits having a physical adventure.
This is a most important distinction, and herein is the solution as well as the
problem.
Most of us have been misinformed about
protection. Usually, in our past somewhere, we have been taught by authority
figures and painful experiences, that our best protection, or defense against
harm, is an aggressive offense. So we assume a defensive stance, attacking whatever
seems threatening, even before we are attacked. This we deem necessary in order
to be safe from an expected onslaught. Or we have been persuaded to rely on
"outside protection," someone or something purported to be a more capable, or
"stronger" champion than we. These faulty teachings do nothing but confirm our
deepest fear that we are always vulnerable and unsafe. Thus we become aggressively defensive because we think somehow we are inherently compromised and endangered. Obviously this kind of thinking has grounded
us in the fearful and threatening tactics.
If there could be one governing rule for
masterful spiritual behavior, it would be "Never meet force with force." Force
is not the almighty power of the universe. Flow is. The ultimate spiritual
"powers" are manifest in us when we are in Flow, not when we have reduced
ourselves to forceful, fearful attempts to control and dominate. The most
powerful warrior is one who never has to draw the sword. If we would be free of
the fear that makes us easy prey to what is opportunistic and harmful, then we
must know we are more than just human. We must learn to be response-able rather
than merely react-able. Then threat is experienced differently. When we learn
that the "real" part of us cannot be threatened, and accept that the "unreal"
part can only exist temporarily, we are no longer at the mercy of perceived
menace. Thus invulnerability is not dependent upon conditions; body, mind, soul
and spirit live in the peace that surpasses circumstances and understanding.
STRENGTHENING THE SPIRITUAL IMMUNE SYSTEM
Just as strengthening the physical immune
system is but a temporary expedient, when it is time for the body to end
such care is no longer required, so also is strengthening the spiritual immune
system (SIS) an interim strategy. However, the SIS does not wait for death to
end its viability. As soon as one begins to realize the power of the immutable
original identity, the need for constant vigilance against impending doom is no
longer the primary focus of the mind. Then the mind creates a much different
life. Where fear in its dreadful forms once filled life's stage, now the play is
delightful, even laughable.
One only need fortify the spiritual immune
system while one is in training to remember the invulnerability of the original
identity. This can be likened to planting zucchini in a summer garden. In the
beginning the plant takes a bit of tending, but once it sprouts, there is
zucchini all over the place. So it is with "re-cognizing," calling to mind, the
capacities of the spirit. The God-Almighty Spirit that is our original nature is
indomitable, impregnable, and unassailable. Now that is power!
Here is how we reawaken the sleeping giant
that we truly are:
PAY ATTENTION
Paying attention is a great and ancient
spiritual master. Few of us have achieved any significant degree of proficiency
in it. The keystone of protection is the ability to pay attention.
Most of us live in a kind of trance. We
are usually running on automatic. In our overcrowded, overstressed,
over-stimulated lives, we are scarcely able to be aware of what we are doing
today, much less recall what we did yesterday. Therein lies the problem. If we
are not attentive, we are not conscious but hypnotized.
Because our attention span is so limited,
we live in a kind of stupor, too often bewildered about how we got where we are,
and what happened along the way. We cannot make responsible choices when
entranced, because we forget we are constantly choosing, with or without awareness.
If asked about our spiritual progress, we are likely to give ourselves more
credit than is due because we bewitch ourselves with delusions, whether they be
of grandeur or diminishment.
The simple task of observing and
acknowledging which thoughts, words, emotions, and actions one is choosing, is
not only life-enhancing, it creates a life of integrity. By noticing what kind
of decisions and choices we make, we discover a lot about our modus operandi. We
learn we have a tendency towards fearful fantasy. If the mind were not so
powerfully creative this would not matter, but our minds are immensely
productive. The mind is a non-stop manufacturing device. We supply the raw
material and it produces.
So the question is: What do I want to
produce? When I am oblivious, it is easy for the mind to become limp, no
spiritual muscles here. The absence of attention allows the mind to grow the
habit of focusing on what is dark, fearful, hateful, angry, guilty, and so on.
This is an open-door invitation to destruction.
Therefore, with everything I think, say,
do, and feel, I am always making a "contribution" to my life, and to humankind.
I am either contributing to the light of the world or adding to its darkness.
What a (potentially) wonderful or disastrous responsibility!
Homework: Commit to paying attention
one day per month. Notice how quickly you lapse into a hypnotic fog. When this
happens, do not judge, condemn, or beat yourself up. Merely notice. Then make a
new choice to pay attention. Choose again and again to pay attention. There is
no limit on how many new choices you can make. Keep bringing yourself back to
attention. If you catch yourself slipping, you are doing well, because you are
paying attention.
At the end of the day take the tally of
your attention quotient. Are there activities, people, conditions (driving,
household chores, boring conversations, mundane tasks, eating, etc.) that
contribute to your loss of attention? Are you more or less aware at certain
times of the day or night? Do you resist paying attention, or refuse outright to
do so?
This is helpful information to have. As
you continue to flex the muscles of your spiritual immune system, your awareness
will expand as you reclaim dominion in life.
THE TRIUNE LAW OF RIGHT LIVELIHOOD
THOUGHTS, WORDS AND DEEDS
What we think, say and do are the raw
materials of creativity. We become, or we manifest the in-kind product of our
ideas, declarations and actions. It is naive to believe we can ignore or bypass
any of the three parts of these "fate makers." No amount of internal deal making
will produce a different result. Despite our equivocations, "purity of thought,
word, and deed" is not just for the boy scouts. If we want to enjoy peace of
mind, well being, and abundance, the laws of right livelihood must be practiced.
Thoughts
Everything originates in thought. We are a
product of thought. All thoughts, our own, other people's, and the collective
world thought, affect us. Thought forms, the byproduct of our mental clarity or
mental sludge, exalt or congest our own lives and everyone else's.
thoughts are things. They take form and
impact our lives and the world at large. Until we fully comprehend that the
power of our mind is sufficient to "create" the world we live in, we can delude
ourselves into believing that so long as we are not aware what we are thinking,
we will be spared the consequences of those thoughts. All thoughts have
consequences that are causal in life. Ignorance of what we are creating with our
thoughts is not a protection form the repercussions of those thoughts.
Christ said to pray unceasingly. Could it
be that focused attention is "praying?" Especially when we "concentrate" a
thought by feeling a strong emotion, are we actually praying? I wonder if Christ
meant we cannot but "pray" unceasingly, since we are seldom without thought. If
thought is the instrument of creation, then regardless what we claim to be
thinking (or praying), we will receive what we have "asked," or thought.
Therefore, questions for everyday, moment-to-moment consideration, might be:
"What am I 'asking' for, or 'praying' for, right now?"
"What am I 'growing' with this thought?"
"In this moment, what is the quality of my thoughts?"
"What do my thoughts demand?"
"Is this thought beneficial or is it damaging?"
All thoughts "demand" a response. The
quality of the thought determines if it will either contribute to one's own well
being, and subsequently the world's well being; or will postpone or destroy well
being. Such is the power of the God-created mind. Consequently, we must be aware
what it is we are asking to receive. When we focus our thinking on what we would
avoid, what we do not want, what we fear, or what is destructive, dreadful, or
painful, we are actively praying for the unwanted to occur. Thus, our
"prayerful" thought empowers those things which are contrary to well being, or
which oppose integrity of being.
It is simple to ascertain the quality of
one's thinking since there are only two kinds of thought. Spiritually,
energetically, psychologically, and physically, thoughts are either:
1. Positive, loving, constructive, and peaceful; or
2. Negative, hateful, destructive, and combative.
So if one's thoughts are anxious, guilty,
shameful, angry, hurtful, resistant and so on, they do not make a contribution
to well being, no matter how we would justify them.
On the other hand, if one's thoughts are
gentle, compassionate, forgiving, non-judgmental and non-violent, they increase
the flow of receiving and giving well being. There are no exceptions to this
fact. Equivocating or rationalizing will have no effect whatsoever.
So, if one's "intention" is to make a
positive contribution in life, but one's thoughts are not of the above mentioned
category (#1), the intention will be overruled by the fact of in-kind
consequence. In other words, believe it or not, accept it or not, life
constantly shows us what we are actually thinking. Our job is to learn the truth
about what is in our minds.
Homework: One day per month
commit to observing your thinking. What you are looking for is fear. Of course,
before we can clean up our thinking, we must first be aware how much of our
thought is fear based. This is because fear in any form will obstruct and
interfere with our ability to give and receive positive contributions.
An easy definition for fear is anything
that is not love, joy, light, and peace. Thus, no matter what
"hat" fear is wearing, anything unlike the above definition is fear. That
includes worry, anxiety, cruelty, anger, guilt, blame, shame, resentment,
jealousy and so on, are all fear wearing a different hat. If you have the desire
to justify or defend your thinking, consider it fear. If you long to be right
about what you are thinking, treat this as fear. "Stinking thinking" exacts a
severe toll on well being.
When you discover yourself engaged in
"stinking thinking," do not chastise yourself. Simply notice. If you
are like the rest of us you may discover that a large percentage of time is
spent fantasizing on what is wrong in your life, or the world's horrific
conditions, or what might befall you or those you love, etc. Each time you catch
yourself, simply make a new choice to focus on what is lovely, or kind,
compassionate, or gentle, or what is beneficial to all, but do not define how
that would look. Let Love do that. If you lapse back into fear, choose again,
and again, and again. It takes awhile to break the habit of being held captive
by fear.
At the end of the day, take accounts of
how much time is spent "praying" fearfully. Success is catching yourself in
fear, and consciously focusing on something else. So if you make then thousand
new choices in a day you are doing great!
Declarations
Words are energy. They are a powerful
vibrational and tonal means of creation. Throughout antiquity "the word" was
considered a sacred power to be used prudently. In ancient Greece, the
pre-Socratic Stoics considered Logos to be the rational principle of the cosmos,
identified with God and constituting the power of reason in the human soul. In
St. John's gospel, Logos is said to be the creative word of God.
We humans are favored with the conscious
creative us of the spoken and written word. As part of our spiritual birthright,
"the logos" is too often ignored and taken for granted. Speaking is a privilege
of the conscious mind. In our daily lives we do not often consider the gift and
the consequence of the spoken word. Regularly we neglect the discipline of
intentional, careful use of our words. For the most part we pay little heed to
what we say, how we say it, or when. Such a lackadaisical attitude regarding the
power of our declarations has sometimes gotten us in trouble.
In days gone by, people realize that all words had issue, or consequence. Agreements were contracted by a person's word. What one said had substance, and people were categorized by whether their "word" was good or bad (which meant meaningless). Now, however, we don't seem to take our words as seriously as we once did. Every day we say things without consideration of consequence. We do not mean what we say, or say what we mean. In emotional outbursts we blurt out cruel and vile words, words which compromise ourselves, and any others in their path.
This is a mistake. Words are still as potent and meaningful as ever they were; and like all volitional proclamations, enduring the consequences of our words remains a great prerogative. We can have the fruits of our pronouncements, or suffer the consequences of them.
Politicians battle with words, poets make love with words, storytellers enchant with words. Words of wisdom uplift us. With words we bless or condemn one another. By our word(s), we reveal the state of our relationship with our divine nature, and with the Source of that nature.
Yet the use of profanity has become so pervasive that it is no longer considered an insult to polite society. Profanity has become trendy and it is fashionable to lace our conversations with words which foul the mouth and taint the mind. We no longer flinch at the vulgarity we so regularly hear. However, not so long ago scurrilous speaking and irreverent attitudes for what is sacred was not a universally accepted part of speech. No culture can afford to disregard the language of its people. We who casually adopt an obscene way of speaking are greasing the slide to our spiritual demise. By our words, we declare it so.
For this reason, we must not allow our wounds, fears, or weaknesses to "speak" for us. Unfortunately, this is often precisely what we do. Rather than simply telling the truth "I do not feel like going out this evening," we beg off a commitment by claiming "I don't feel so well. I think I am coming down with something."
This is not just using "our word" as an excuse; it is a proclamation for making oneself sick. We make vows of pain, limitation and death; such as, "This is to-die-for." "I will never trust (men, women, you) again.”I hate you so much I wish you were dead." We issue damaging proclamations: "Marriages don't work." "Love never lasts." "Relationships always fail." "I never succeed at anything."
Remember, the creative universe takes everything we say or think as a standing order to bring forth. It does not "do" jokes, slang or colloquialism. Because we do not realize the power of "the word" we continue to issue "orders" we do not want filled; and so we limit or harm ourselves, and one another, by wrong use of this power. When we "call forth" wrongly, whether we are aware of what we are saying or not, we deny ourselves the power of "speaking into" what we do want. Thus do we continuously limit and divert the power of our word.
Homework: Remembering you are not on a mission to belittle yourself, commit one day per month to observing the nature of the day's declarations. Look for lies and avoidance of truth. Watch out for pronouncements that describe you as flawed, unworthy, less than what you are (or could be). Take note of "foul mouthed" speaking. Be aware how often "stinking thinking" is accompanied by "stinking speaking."
Your words are a personal advertisement for how you think of yourself. Ask yourself, "What do I want on my billboard?" Be on alert for ill-favored ways of speaking. When you catch yourself, choose to speak in a way that is befitting a God-created being. You may be amazed how powerful this can make you feel.
Actions
How many times have we heard the ancient adage: "Your actions speak louder than your words." To this we may add: "your actions speak as loudly as your thoughts." We act out what we truly believe. So to discover what actually lingers in the mind we simply watch what we do. There are not enough good intentions or sweet words to cover up what we do. We may talk a different story, we may swear our actions are not what we truly intended, but nonetheless we always do what we believe, what is truly in our mindset. Our behavior will tell the truth about who we think ourselves to be, and the aftereffects are what our actions demand.
Though actions are not the primary shaper of life, they are the inseparable companion to what is. Thoughts are the noun in the "sentence" of life, and actions are the verb. Thoughts come first, actions follow, but both are creative and elicit a response. We cannot avoid what our actions produce. For example, when we think hatefully, speak hatefully, and act hatefully, we invite hate into our lives.
When we discover that some of our actions are less than wholesome, there is work to be done. Most of us, some of the time, fail to notice the discrepancy between the idealized version of oneself, and the way we actually live or show up in life. Like children, we have not learned when to say "yes" to ourselves, and when to say "no." Our behavioral boundaries have become compromised by loosely defined, and often ignored, bad habits. Habits of behavior are re-actions (repeated actions) which are reproduced without responsible choice. Aristotle said: "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a choice." Since we are an habitual being, let us make habits which feed the soul rather than starve it.
It is not enough to wish for different results. We must act differently. Remember the word "decent?" Not so long ago it was in public usage describing ordinary folk living a respectable, good life. Now the edges of acceptable conduct are more loosely defined. What was "simply not done" is no longer prescribed by the limits of common decency. The point beyond which we will not go, no longer a fixed and reliable measure, flaps uselessly in the wind of desire. "Beyond here there be dragons," the inscription on maps of old that warn of danger, could well be resurrected to remind us we are in deep water.
Oh, we can and do pretend we do not know the difference between right and wrong, but this kind of moral make believe exacts a cost from our well being. Cause and effect simply will not be separated, no matter how hard we try to find exceptions in our case. Do right, live right. This is right livelihood.
Insanity could be defined as continuing to do the same thing while expecting a different result. Children hurt themselves this way until they finally connect the dots: "This act produces a result I do not like." Finally it registers: "Perhaps I should no longer do this." Then the hurt stops!
"To look is one thing. To see what you look at is another. To understand what you see is a third. To learn from what you understand is still something else. But to act on what you learn is all that really matters."
-Anonymous
Homework: One day per month make your words match your actions and thoughts. Yes, you read that right. When we actually state out loud what we are doing, we get an in-our-face signpost that we cannot ignore. Awareness then is unavoidable. By exposing and stating the truth about what you are doing, you will come fact to face with the distorted part of yourself. It will not be able to hide behind "blind eyes" and denial. In other words, when you "speak" what you do, you are ordering yourself to take note of the "real" beliefs that linger behind the fictional beliefs.
Note particularly the "indecent" behaviors. Remember, however, you are not to beat yourself up. This is not about punishment and guilt. It is about discovery, honesty, and exercising the power of choice. Once such behavior is uncovered, consciously choose to forgive yourself and pause a moment to experience peace that is waiting to come to you. Peace will lead you "home" to the real you.
IMPEDIMENTS TO WELL BEING
Though one may be well schooled in religious dogma and ritual, most of us remain spiritually illiterate. Spiritual education has less to do with a particular set of dogmatic rules, and more to do with knowing and applying practical tools for sustaining "the good life" while facing the challenges of physicality.
We humans spiritually founder as seemingly limitless threats to well being proliferate in the world, in ourselves and our families, and on the job. Too many of us are caught in a terrible and constant state of dread. Instead of living in present moment possibility, we worry ourselves "to death" with "what-if" thinking. Stressing in advance over what might be only adds to the world-wide body of fear.
When we "paint" with fear on the canvas of life the work we produce is not artful but awful. As we lock into imaginings of "what if," we ignore "what is," and even during the peaceful times we wait for the next alarming even to befall us. So often what we imagine is worse than what occurs. By remaining stuck in what-if apprehension, "what is next" is also shaped by fear. Remembering that we "grow" what we focus on, let us not propagate a garden of horrors.
It is simple to recognize when and if one is thinking fearfully.
The three categories of creative thought are:
1. Fearful that looks to the future with frightful trepidation. By arguing for "what-if" calamities, fear creates many alarming possibilities.
2. Peaceful that accepts "what is" in the present moment, and knows to trust that all will be well in spite of appearances.
3. Neutral that has neither preference nor judgment and rests calmly while asking "what next?"
Fear
We speak now of the debilitating fears, not about the instinctual fear that rises when the body's survival is threatened. Though we may not realize it, a disproportionate amount of our time is involved in some kind of fear thought. It is shocking to discover we live as fearful primates. Fear is the single most effective tool of the dark. Without our fear the darkness would have very little influence on us.
As I see it, fear can be summarized within Four main categories:
1. I will not get what I want.
2. I will lose what I have.
3. There is not enough to go around.
4. I cannot trust anything or anyone.
Honest examination of one's mindset will likely lead, directly or indirectly, to a hidden coffer of fears. Fear is a universal condition. Most times it is the great barrier to human growth. As we grow older we learn more and more fears so that by the time we reach maturity most of us are loaded with them. Some would say this is gained wisdom, but fear is seldom wise and more often ruinous to sane, calm response.
Teeming with uncertainty and change, life is one giant unknown. Unknowns generate fears. Like signing a peace accord, when we cease to make war with what we do not know, fears diminish. Eventually as we are consistent in turning fear over to peace, fears disappear. If we do not ferret out the fear, expose it and release it, the buried fear will putrefy and spread like an infection of the mind.
The trick is not to deny the presence of fear, nor to attempt to banish it by force. Admitting to fears, and acknowledging them openly, immediately diffuses some of their harmful aspects. "Confessing" this way is sufficient to unplug the emotional charge of fears which undermine calm, clear thinking. Confessing can be an intensely empowering act of self reclamation. "Unfriendlies," whether they be self saboteurs or dark force interlopers, use our secret fears and guilts as effective tools for twisting self worth into self loathing. Fear of exposure must be active in us in order for these secrets and fears to be used as a weapon against us. There, self disclosure of fears and mistakes puts us squarely in the light of remembered strength and invulnerability.
Ask yourself: Am I thinking, or am I fearing? Fear is anything unlike peace, love or well being. Therefore all worry, concern, anxiety, doubt, uneasiness, revenge, anger, guilt, blame, condemnation, resistance, and so on, is fear. No matter how slight the disturbance, it is nonetheless fear. Just as a female cannot be a little bit pregnant, so also we cannot be a little bit fearful. With our thoughts we are either "growing" fear and thereby adding to the darkness, or we are "growing" peace and thereby contributing to the light. It is that simple. That unequivocal. There is no middle ground of fear. We are either fearful, or we are peaceful.
When I am fearful, I can be harmful. When I am loving, I can be helpful. Love joins; this is healing. Fear separates; this is traumatic. What could be clearer?
After twenty-five years of dedicated practice choosing peace instead of fear, I am still amazed how quickly my mind can slip into fear fantasies. A fear fantasy is an utterly fanciful thought that materializes from the thin air of imaginary dread. I have caught myself creating a horrid outcome from nothing more than the clay of fearful fiction. "What might be" is seldom as bad as the speculations of my fearful mind. It is astounding how devoted to terror the mind can be. If left unchecked, it will always distort unlimited possibility to craft what is appalling rather that what is appealing.
I share this because we are too often impatient with ourselves when practicing mind change. The human mind has been shaped by untold eons of change, fear, and distortion. Do not expect instant gratification. The fearful mind is a tenacious adversary to well being. The key is to replace it with its nemesis, compassion, delight, kindness, tranquility, you are bound to succeed. Life will improve, and you will have yourself to thank for it, and that leads to gentleness and self respect. You are teaching yourself that you are worth the effort!
Homework: Ask yourself all through the day, am I fearing or am I thinking? You may be surprised to discover how often what you assume is "thinking" is actually "fearing." No matter how many times you catch yourself in fear, be thrilled over the discovery because now you can give the fear to peace.
Before retiring, take accounts: How much of my time is spent being fearful? How am I growing my fear? When am I most fearful? What triggers fear in me?
As you go to sleep remember: Peace is love gently lifting you out of fear into safekeeping.
Ignorance
As a people we don't want to hear about ignorance, because we don't like the word. First of all we assume ignorance means that we are stupid. However ignorance comes from the word ignore which means "the condition of being uneducated, unaware, or uniformed."
By our lack of attention, and because of our fear of being flawed or unworthy, we are "persuaded" to ignore a limitless amount of available information. We discount, reject and shrug off all kinds of useful information. If we ignore, the position we are assuming is that of our rear end being exposed as our head is in the sand. When we convince ourselves, "If I refuse to believe this is happening, it cannot be happening," we add to the load of spiritual fiction that compromises our life.
What is worse, we are often involved in some form of organized, dogmatic belief system that encourages ignorance. Some of these beliefs demand that ignorance be perpetuated, so we make promises to stay ignorant, or even to proselytize ignorance.
Ignorance is second only to fear as a threat to our balance and safety. To be ignorant is to take for granted any aspect of life by relying solely on another person’s say-so, believing their experience, values, beliefs or authority to be supremely valuable, while disregarding one's own valuable experience.
Life can be simplified when we reduce it to two fundamental activities: doing and leaving undone, or in spiritual terms, learning and unlearning. When doing or leaving undone is prompted by one's own inner knowing, wisdom is gained. However, incessant doing without the promptings of spiritual guidance can leave us hopelessly striving without any gain in personal experience. Life can be consumed by ever-more doing, until at last one realizes she can never do enough to be good enough, or sure enough, or safe enough, or accomplished enough.
Doing or learning by imitation leaves us stranded somewhere outside our own lives without any experience to guide us. Doing or learning, prompted by one's own inner urging, and embellished by experience and revelation, provide certainty from a deep, inner reality. It does not substitute the outer reality for the inner, and considers the inner knowing at least as valuable as what is perceived outwardly. This is how self respect grows, flowers, and spreads its seeds of wisdom.
Homework: Regularly pause long enough in the frenzy of doing to "look around" for the guidance and information that is always available. Be sure to look in the unexpected "places," like your heart, your still mind when it is not straining to know, spontaneous gifts of wisdom from friends and strangers, billboards, movies, books, license plates. Everything is "speaking" if you would but notice.
Pause by quiet pause, choose knowing in place of ignorance. You are never without guidance and help, and you must be still long enough to realize it is coming to you.
Denial
Many of us are products of the News Age Movement. In the 1960's we learned that we could handle everything with affirmations. We affirmed that: "Every day in every way we are getting better and better." We assumed that endlessly saying this would really have impact. We did not know enough to do the necessary spiritual homework of preparing the mind to integrate the deeper meaning of affirmation that it may be brought forth into experience that is impactful.
Further, we learned "If I do not believe 'it' is real, 'it' is not real." this kind of spiritual shortsightedness has no protection in it. Many of us are still functioning within that framework. We would like to think we have left it behind, yet we still live as if wishing will make "it" so. This is spiritual denial and it is "slippery" in the ways it tantalizes us into believing about ourselves what is so only in potential.
When denial is nothing more than disowning what is frightening or threatening in the mind, it is no different from other forms of make-believe. Like the lion in the Wizard of Oz, no matter how many times he said "I do have a heart. I do! I do! I do!" his heart was not real until he tested his resolve and courageously took a stand. Then did he truly know he had a heart, and it was stalwart.
However, there is a valuable spiritual use for denial that is too often forgotten or ignored. That is to knowingly deny that anything or anyone outside oneself can truly do us harm. This form of spiritual denial rests in the unshakable knowledge that "what" we are, that is spirit, cannot be altered or "affected, ever, by anyone or anything. This kind of knowing underpins the experience of spiritual invulnerability and serves us well in the dark night of the soul.
Homework: Regularly keep a sharp eye out for falsehoods that convince us of "wished for" spiritual accomplishments. Lying to oneself leaves one caught between opposing "truths." Being two-faced is a spiritual vice which teaches us not to trust ourselves. If we need to speak of our accomplishments, make them public, and be recognized for them, we probably have not achieved any noteworthy degree of mastery. Spiritual arrogance masks a doubtful heart and uncertain mind.
INDISPENSABLE TOOLS
Cleaning the Mindset
Interesting word, "mind-set." It describes the window through which we view life, and the world around us. The mindset is comprised of beliefs, attitudes, thoughts, judgments, assumptions, ideals, prejudices, values and preferences. These are formed, established, accepted and held as "truth" as dictated by life's authoritative institutions, such as family, religion, government, culture, academia, medicine, economy and so on.
"Belief" is a currently popular label for anything that cannot be fully understood or identified. There are three kinds of belief:
1. Those we know we have.
2. Those we don't know we have.
3. Those we long for.
Belief determines perception. Through the spectacles of belief does one perceive. If beliefs are thick or compressed, they magnify. If they are soiled, they obscure or deceive. Yet if they are regularly polished by the fingers of an examining mind, they allow for new experiences based on updated information; and new experiences can be teaching tools.
The more beliefs we have the harder it is to live they way we want. Too many beliefs, and we are conflicted, confused and confounded. Often spiritual growth is sabotaged by transparent, invisible, or lost beliefs that were implanted by authority figures before one was mature enough to realize the nature and consequence of the belief.
For the most past, we are not familiar with the beliefs that are stored in the closet of the mind. Rarely do we pick through that closet of beliefs to weed out what no longer fits, to discard hand-me-downs that no longer suit, and give away what does not serve. No one taught us we are capable of being the source of our own beliefs and thoughts, and it is purposeful to align one's beliefs and actions with one's inner guidance and goals.
However, too often the mindset mandates habitual reactions to unexamined beliefs, assumptions, judgments, values, ideals etc. Eventually these "harden" into mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual residue. These residues influence and determine the quality of our lives by concretizing misconceptions, misinterpretations, misperceptions and misbeliefs.
Who has not had to confront a mind that is set, rock hard in its determination not to warm to a new idea, no matter how much sense it makes. I call this "Popsicle mind." "Popsicle minds" have been hard for so long that the door to the mind is frozen shut. When this condition is extreme, it can tolerate only "artificially sweetened" delusions that support its close mindedness.
Though it may appear that special measures are required to "thaw" a frozen mind, this is not so. All it takes is a little willingness to make the mind supple with one choice at a time.
What would life be like if our mindset was representative of what we actually choose to believe? Well, actually it is! Life accurately mirrors what we truly believe. We are that powerful, that skilled in actualizing our beliefs, whether we know it or not, and whether we believe it or not. That being the case, it behooves us to become familiar with what we warehouse within the belief "system."
What would we be like if our mindset became a mind-in-flow? If we put aside rigidity and updated and regularly renewed the mind? What if we chose to be guided by perennial inner wisdom of the soul? What if?
Homework: Twice per year, New Year's Day and your birthday, spend half a day "cleaning out" the closet of the mind. Get rid of what is outdated, outworn, useless, inappropriate, and does not fit anymore.
COMPANIONS OF THE ROAD TO WHOLENESS
Accountability and Responsibility
Somewhere along the way to remembering what we are, we lost or put aside our response-ability and instead we opted for react-ability. That is, for whatever reason, we do not respond to what is currently happening, but instead we continue to react to what happened in the past as though it was happening now. It is as if we carry the past forward and plunk it down in the present. In this way we continuously revisit or re-experience the hurts, mistakes, and perils of the past. Thus do we condemn ourselves to relive what is destructive, rather than crating anew in the present. Re-action is automatic, response is choosing in the present moment, with awareness. Eventually this is habit forming, and we are no longer response-able but are only react-able. In this way the exquisite privilege of choice is lost to us, since we can only choose when we are "in response."
Put another way then, responsibility is being able to respond so as to be the source or cause of what is preferable and helpful in life, now, in this moment. Since we are always "sourcing" or "causing" something, the question becomes: sourcing or causing what?
Being accountable means that I am answerable for my choices. In other words, I accept the consequences of my choices. Further I realize it is likely I shall be "called to account" for my choices. Such is the groundwork of wise stewardship.
This great spiritual privilege we would cast away imagining we could then be free of liability. Such short-sightedness misses the point. As long as one is accountable, the choice, the event, and the consequence are inseparable. Therefore, one is never "under the thumb" of an outside authority. One is self determined, able to correct, heal and recreate anew rather than remain controlled and enslaved by what one sees as a greater authority that herself. The misunderstanding and misuse of authority and accountability keeps us imprisoned in powerlessness and ineffectuality. We have a choice. If the "choice" muscle has grown flaccid with misuse or lack of use, then exercise it.
We are all graced with opportunities to demonstrate spiritual, mental, emotional, and physical competence. How, or if, we maximize these opportunities is up to us. Secreted in each and every situation, including the most mundane and ordinary, is the potential to be high-minded. If we choose to ignore the opportunity, then we have missed the point of experience.
We humans want all the liberties and freedoms of the masterful, but we don't want the accountability. It behooves us to first look only to ourselves for all problems and all solutions. Radical responsibility brings radical power. If there's a problem here, I caused it. This is how we realize the solutions are here, with us, where the problems are.
Finally liberated from the Nazi death camps, Dr. Viktor Frankl came to New York and eventually traveled to California. After visiting America, Dr. Frankl said he never could understand how we could have a Statue of Liberty on the east coast without a "Statue of Responsibility" on the west coast.
Homework: Adopt the attitude: If there is a problem in my life, the common denominator is I am always at the scene of the "accident." If I see a problem, I am in the problem, I am an undeniable part of it. Viewing problems from this perspective can change one's life. Now what am I going to do about it? Make a different choice!
Authority
"Response-ableness" is a blessing, not a curse, and not a duty. It is by being response-able that we claim our authority, that is to author our own lives. To be deprived of the privilege of response-ableness is to always be controlled by some outside authority; someone or something which is bigger, stronger, more powerful, holier, etc., than we. To turn away from response-ableness is to disclaim our original nature, and thereby "slide sideways" into thinking ourselves as less than we were created to be.
We of this generation, certainly in the West, are determined to assign authorship of life to something outside of ourselves. We insist on it in most aspects of life. We deify the institutions in our society until our experience is really dominated by authority figures (parents, teachers, doctors, ministers/priests, police, lawyers, politicians, the powers that be), situations, circumstances, crises, and so on. Thereby we continue to give over our power to someone or something else until we are finally "out of control." Thus we give away dominion by relinquishing self control. It would seem we really don't mind paying the price of being without sovereignty, so long as we do not have to be the responsible authority in our own life. The buck no longer stops here; it gets passed along to whichever "tyrant" will snatch it up.
This kind of subjective relinquishment of power is not limited to physical life. We do it in our spiritual life as well when we look for something outside of ourselves to make "it" better. Even when we talk about the "spirit within" what we almost always mean is the "spirit without." Our inner looking is actually looking out for the answer, a looking out for the deus ex machina, a "helper from heaven." Rarely do we trust that help can come from within one's own "be-ing-ness," or the holiness within which is our true nature.
No being of light will do for us what is our privilege to do for ourselves. Why? Because to do so is to discredit we who believe we are less than able, and therefore add to the measure of imagined helplessness. This is not to say there is not help from the divine. It is to clarify that help comes in teaching mode rather than doing-for mode. Beings of light teach us to be self sufficient that we may remember we are children of light. Like all children we whine for someone "greater" to do "it" for us. Yet a good "parent" always helps us to learn how to do "it" for ourselves. This is not cruelty. It is love.
Homework: Allow the body to tell you what the mind refuses to say. Pay attention to the bodily signals (goosebumps, thrills, prickles, tingles, sighs, racing heart, change in breathing, and so on) that indicate something worth noting is happening. The body is a great communicator and it often recognizes what the mind discounts. You do not make this earthly journey alone. Mighty companions are always with you. You may be oblivious to all kinds of guidance and assistance. Pay attention - and ask for help.
Discipline
Note: Before we go further I will tell you of a spiritual choice I long ago made. That is, for me, the divine is exemplified by the Holy Spirit. I chose this feminine aspect of the divine because of:
1. The interface the Holy Spirit has with earth and we humans; and
2. Because of the qualities of the Holy Spirit
In my experience the Holy Spirit is the guide, caretaker, nurturer, advocate, and teacher. Also the Holy Spirit helps me make corrections, and gives succor, sanctuary, solace and comfort. The Holy Spirit is with me as I journey through life. I abide and rest in the Holy Sprit.
I share this not to influence your choice but to clarify mine.
Most of us do not much like discipline. It asks too much of us. After all, we are "free spirits" with "free will" who do not want anyone telling us what to do or how to do it. Yet without discipline, that is the "training expected to produce a specific character or pattern of behavior, especially training that produces moral or mental improvement" spiritual awareness will not develop. Regardless which spiritual philosophy we choose, by discipline is meant the daily, regular, ongoing commitment to "still" the "monkey mind" and make an experiential connection to that which is holy or beyond the distraction of finite physical life.
The core word in discipline is "disciple." To be a disciple means to be "an active adherent." We are being asked to actively initiate and maintain a relationship with the divine. This is must like cultivating a relationship with a would-be friend. The first step in sustaining a good friendship is keeping in touch. It is exactly the same with God.
It does not matter what we call that which is sacred, Holy Spirit, Universal Mind, higher self, inner knower, God, angels, divine mother, or the heart. What matters is that we connect with It, and are intimate with It. The form this connection takes is not as important as sustaining the relationship. Whether we think of this as meditation, contemplation, prayer, or communication, regardless what we call It, we must make contact. Then we must "grow" this relationship. What is needed is more than a fleeting or occasional nod towards the divine. It is not sufficient to only cry for help while ignoring God all the other times. This boned has to be as vital and juicy, as personal and unlimited as the river that flows between beloveds.
Realize that lack of concentration is not the only problem we have with discipline. Rather it is our misbelief that none of us, especially oneself, is (really) worth the consistent vigilance that spiritual discipline demands. This is one of our worst self deceptions: the deeply disguised and disheartening belief that we are, at our core, flawed and therefore not worth the effort it takes to rebuild our spiritual awareness. In every case of spiritual self deception, the problem is always we have thought wrongly about what we are.
Homework: Begin with only 5 minutes in the morning, and 5 minutes in the evening. Set aside this time to simple "tune into" the stillness that is already present inside oneself. This is more a "not doing" than a "doing." Stillness is there. Peace and calm are there. Persevere. Make contact.
Witnessing
Along with forgiveness, "right witnessing" is perhaps our most important function as citizens of a spiritually sick world. We can only be healers one for another when we insist o seeing everyone as spiritually worthy, in spite of all appearances to the contrary. This "spiritual service" is especially crucial when one is temporarily unable to do this for oneself. There are times when people lose touch with their original nature. To remember for another when she is in the pits of darkness, be it a spiritual, mental, emotional, or physical crisis, is how we function as agents of repair for each other, and for the entire world. "Holding" someone as light while they cannot do this for themselves can be an immense relief. Plus it is profoundly healing just to know someone would do this.
"Holding as light" is as simple as imagining or visualizing the person awash with light. Keep in mind the image of that person as light. Look right past any appearances to the contrary. Mentally insist on maintaining the picture of them as filled to overflowing with bright, clear, white light. Whenever they come to mind, see them this way. One cannot do this too often for themselves, for another and for the world. Humans are desperately in need of this kind of radiant, loving care of one another.
What seems to be an unlikely theory is supported by the work of Rupert Sheldrake, a British scientist. In his theory of morphogenetic fields he offers fascinating evidence that once enough people embrace an idea it achieves sufficient persuasive power to influence others at large. We have heard of this as the "Hundredth Monkey" principle.
What exciting possibilities this portends! A spiritual grass-roots movement to compassionately hold all humans as light. Whether manifesting as light or something less, not one of us is to be left behind. Such spiritual generosity could actually lift humankind out of the dregs of irreconcilable cruelty. Remember: We are always contributing to the light or the dark.
Homework: Practice holding another as light, especially when you have judged them otherwise; or when they are temporarily forgetful of their own original nature; or when they appear to be unworthy of such kindness. (Especially do this with yourself. We are harsh and often merciless with our own "little" frightened selves.)
FOR CORRECTION OF ERRORS
Forgiveness
Though misunderstood, forgiveness is perhaps the greatest healing tool on earth, and the most efficient means for keeping us in successful relationship with life.
Unfortunately most of us have been taught wrongly about forgiveness. consequently, too few have a true understanding of forgiveness and are therefore deprived of its far-reaching benefits.
there is a way to forgive that leaves everyone feeling like they've won. Contrary to what "churchianity" has taught about forgiveness, it is not about someone from a lofty, righteous position looking down upon a lowly, ne'er-do-well, and deigning to bestow pardon and mercy.
Forgiveness is not what some therapist are wont to do. that is, to endlessly repeat the " processing" of grievances, thereby bringing them forward from the past into the present where they can continue to taint the life one could be living now.
Neither is forgiveness the New Age habit of burying unresolved injuries and injustices under sugar-coated affirmations. Pretending to let the hurt go only insures it will fester and resurface more virulently at some other inopportune time.
Forgiveness is never about disowning one's deeply felt injuries; nor does it make believe that heinous behavior did not occur. Forgiveness neither denies crime, injustice, or atrocity nor does it condone. What forgiveness does is bring relief from the pain, grief and paralysis of injury. Real or imagined, injury feels the same. There fore forgiveness does not necessarily attempt to psychoanalyze what is so for the ones who suffer. Rather it simply makes what hurts go away.
Forgiveness, more than anything else, chips away at, and finally disappears, the fear and darkness hiding in our minds and hearts that it may not continue to poison life. Wherever unforgiveness is lurking there will also likely be guilt, anger, blame, shame, and the desire for revenge. these destructive emotions lay out a welcome mat for the onslaught of a multitude of anti-life energies. Whether the unforgiveness frees another or oneself, the gift of forgiveness places a protective and comforting "Band-Aid" over the parts of the psyche that have been injured and scarred.
However, we can't "do" forgiveness by ourselves. The truth is we need help to forgive. If we are still "hot and suffering," or if we have "cooled down and hardened," we may be blinded to the larger view of what is happening, why it is occurring, and how to escape the perplexing tangle of it. When we need the exquisite clarity of the Inner Teacher who sees what is good for all and knows how to implement it. When we turn to the Inner Teacher to help us to forgive, we are tutored in mind, heart and soul healing. Thus does forgiveness heal the scars of the soul, the broken heart, and the mistakes of the mind, that we may be saved from repeating the fearsome patters unforgiveness evokes.
Here are the basic steps of forgiveness:
1. Recognize you have a problem. You are caught in the cycle of anger, guilt, accusation, projection and futility.
2. Be willing that forgiveness could occur - in spite of yourself. No matter how impossible or unlikely this may seem. (This step immensely helpful when you are still "bleeding" form the wound.)
3. Acknowledge that it does not feel good to live like this. There must be a better way.
4. Call to the Holy Spirit for help. Say "Give me another way to see this."
5. Gladly accept the new "pictures" of what happened, what it was for, what effect it has had, what it means for the future. In other words, be willing to accept that there is (or might be) another way to see this. You may not know what it is, but it is possible. (If you honestly cannot yet accept any new perspective, at least include the new ones with your own perspective.)
Homework: Practice forgiveness as soon as you notice you are "out of love," any time you feel fear in any form. Forgiveness can be as immediate as your willingness to call for help. The greatest news of all is, it is not we who "do" forgiveness. It is the Holy Spirit. So if you are feeling "I cannot forgive," be aware that is the truth. Your job is to be willing that forgiveness is possible, to accept that something else besides what you experienced could have happened, and to look at what that might be as it comes to you. All the rest is in the "hands" of the Holy Spirit.
Undoing the Consequences
This technique is another effective healing agent for the correction of "insanities" (and all forms of fear are insane), and the undoing of the consequences. As soon as possible after a mistake, misthought, mishap, ask the Holy Spirit within to help you undo the consequences of your fearful thoughts. Then name the particular error of mind or fear, and describe it briefly.
"I ask the Holy Spirit within me to help me undo the consequence of my insane thought about........ Thank you.," (Gratitude is a major transformative power.)
The power of our connection with the Holy Spirit is unlimited. We can reach into the past, present, or future, and get help cleaning up the "messes" our disturbed thinking or troubled behavior may have made. Should we slip into revisiting or reclaiming our fearful thoughts by recalling them, simply repeat the process. Fortunately we are allotted an unlimited number of "undoings."
Homework: As often as necessary, undo the consequences of mistakes by calling them back and collapsing the thought bubble (like in cartoons) that would become a potential damaging thought form.
I have seen this effect miraculous corrections. The stories from people who use it are remarkable.
Try it. It takes the sting out of being "only human," and fortifies the experience of being so much more.
SUMMARY
We adorn our bodies with crystals, amulets, medals, thinking they will bring power and protection. We cling to objects believing they will ward off an attack. We attend ceremonies and perform rituals hoping they will save us from the dark when all the time it is in our won minds.
Ninety-five percent of all our problems would already be tended to if we were to live as though we recognize what we are, and by our mindset we are either strengthening or weakening the Spiritual Immune System. There really is so little for us to do, and so very much for us to remember. Invulnerability is always about being; protection is about heeding.
If we will ask ourselves: "Does this thought/opinion/action add to the light or darkness of this world? We are always contributing to the light or to the darkness. We are either the instruments of repair we are meant to be, or we are being used as tools of destruction.
We cannot seek after mastery while neglecting its basic requirements. Though we sometimes believe ourselves inadequate to the task, this basic spiritual curriculum is not too difficult for us to mast for "ye (we) are gods."
We are perfectly safe divine beings of light, manifesting love as life. We are already, always, in full possession of invincible invulnerability. What we lack is the awareness of our original identity. It is the inability or refusal to "know Thyself" that deprives us of the gifts of our spiritual heritage. We are, by our own hand, co-makers of our travails. We cannot but be what we were created to be. No matter what. No exceptions. However, we must realize what that is. And we must accept it. We are now, and will always be, the holy, and therefore safe, children of the God.
And that is protection.

Spirit Releasement Therapy / Past Life Therapy / Recovery of Soul Fragmentation /
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Spiritual Immune System / Spiritual Gifts of Discernment |