July 31st 2004 -Rev. Korinne Wilson
The Patterns of Choice and Karmic Effect.
Making Intuitive Choices:
Choosing not to choose is still a choice. When faced with a situation in which
action is the only course many options may come to us. Each of these options
feel different to us. By taking these feelings into a meditative state, we can
feel which option is best. Each option holds a vibration, and by tapping into
that vibration we can visualize the best option, which is not always the most
obvious. This requires a leap of faith, which is putting trust into intuitive
sight rather than purely logical means.
Many great people have changed their lives by following an intuitive dream,
rather than a logical goal. Madonna is a modern example of this phenomenon.
Other great Intuitives include Mozart, Jung, Shakespeare, Dali, Neil Gaimen,
Tim Burton and an ocean of ancient to futuristic bemused creators.
Karmic Effect:
Each choice we make brings into our lives an energy. What you choose ultimately
becomes your destiny. If you continually choose to lie and be dishonest with
your feelings, denying the truth of your feelings and higher nature, you will
fall farther away from hope, faith and intuitive knowing. When we choose to
be false we also choose to lose all of our positive spiritual power. People
have learned to use their negative spiritual power to their advantage, however
that power does not protect them against the laws of karma. As you reap so shall
you sow. Negative emotions, feelings and actions promote more of the same energy
upon it’s wielder.
Patterns and Freedom:
We are constantly making choices, and each one brings consequences. Striving
to know the true self comes with making at least some choices based on intuition.
As we grow spiritually we must confront and become friends with the subconscious
mind. It is the womb of all choices, paths and consequences. Most young adults
are acting out a life script that was heavily impressed upon by their parents,
siblings and social environment. They have not come to know their true selves,
only what they were told to be. We will act out patterns of behavior from our
family of origin. If your mother was a caretaker and your father was an abuser,
then you are likely to either choose the role of the abuser or the caretaker
in your relationships. This is part of the process of finding out who we truly
are. We first become what we saw. When we figure out the patterns of this repetitive
script, we are free to heal the patterns and be set free of them. Once free
or mostly disentangled from the snares of the past we evolve into a true adult.
Until you have healed the sick family patterns that you exhibit, you cannot
be considered a true adult.
As an adult we come to acknowledge the beauty of the universe, and become more
compassionate toward our fellow man. You can see life from a clear perspective,
no longer troubled by the difficulty of the past. In this stage spirituality
is a natural part of us to develop. We come to believe in love because for the
first time we are truly loving ourselves, and trying act in loving ways towards
all others.