Thursday 9 October 2014

THE GIFT EVEN WHEN LIFE IS TOUGH.

Being safe

To feel safe is such a human need, especially when we delve into the loving and exacting power within, where truth uncovers a process that makes us feel vulnerable … where tears flow and anger erupts, yet we still know we are held in loving arms of grace and deep consciousness. It is where “being” all parts of who we are meets consciousness and transformation begins.
This book is an inner journey, and I invite you to join me. It is a perfect time to be here in Crete. I feel I am going out on a limb, risking deep changes in my life path—“the shift” as motivational speaker, Wayne Dyer, calls it, “from ambition to meaning.” It is a journey to the afternoon and evening of a meaningful life!

Dive deep with me!

So as I dive daily into the warm blue Libyan sea, I ask you to dive in too. The message in this book is divided into a series of dives (some quite beautifully fierce) inside to the “power within”! I know I need divine inspiration, which I ask for daily, and moment-by-moment in my meditations and affirmation prayers. Let me tell you a story about those hidden gifts we all have when we take risks to go into a desert retreat.

 

I affirm you may find this book similar to the story from poet, philosopher, and scholar John O’Donohue in his book Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom.

The king and the beggar’s gift

Once upon a time there lived a king who was so popular that his subjects would often bring him gifts just to show him how much they loved him. They brought him exquisite ornaments, expensive jewelry, fashionable clothing, exotic foods and spices. The king received these graciously, and felt very humbled by the generosity of his subjects. One day, a shabbily dressed man appeared at the palace. “I would like to see the king,” he told the palace guard. “I have a special gift for him.”
The king wasn’t terribly busy that day and so the poor man was shown into his presence. He bowed low before his sovereign, and taking out a melon from his bag, he said: “Your majesty, please accept this melon as a token of my esteem and affection.” The king thanked him politely, but since he didn’t much like melons, he handed it to a servant and told him to throw it into the back yard.
The next week the poor man appeared again, and once more he presented the king with a melon. As before, the king told the servant to throw it away. This went on week after week, but the king was too polite to tell the man that he wasn’t eating the melons.
One day, just as the man was about to hand over the melon, the king’s pet monkey jumped down from the window ledge where it had been sitting and knocked the melon to the ground smashing it to pieces. When the king looked at the mess on the floor he noticed on the floor a glistening stone. He picked it up and found that it was a diamond; a bigger diamond than any he had ever seen in his life. He immediately went to the back yard of the palace where the other melons had been thrown, and, sure enough, in the middle of all the rotting fruit, there were numerous huge diamonds.


What I want to emphasize with this book and my story is the spiritual principle that the things we don’t like often can contain the greatest treasures. Sharing our negative beliefs, our tears, our lies, our angers, and our guilt can invite the Source to heal the wounds we bear from these experiences. With one proviso, we don’t become a victim to that pain. And you might ask yourself, when in your life have things you thought were going to be awful, become a source of healing, inspiration and happiness? I know I have made many mistakes by holding onto lies about life and myself. Yet I know divine love holds me through those dark nights of soul retrieval.

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