Friday, July 27, 2007

The Chains of Fear

What is your deepest fear? There are many to take from. Iodine am not really talking about phobic disorders here, fearfulness of heights, bugs, little spaces, etc. I am referring to things like the fearfulness of death, the unknown region and the peak on most lists… populace speaking! That is very interesting when you believe about it. Most of us have got a deeper fearfulness of being viewed negatively in the public oculus than of facing death! So the fearfulness of not fitting in, being rejected, or at least not accepted by others is deeper and closer to our core than anything else.

What makes that state you? It states me that our first fear, the 1 that occurred immediately after we "fell from grace" was and is that we are separate somehow from "all that is". This semblance is so powerful that we experience an intense demand to belong to something larger than ourselves. We seek credence and blessing through a group. Many of us have got more than than one grouping to fall back on just in lawsuit we make acquire ostracized from one of them.

Of course, this fearfulness of rejection makes not pertain lone to public speaking. It clasps us anytime we see something from a different position than our group. The minute we get to demo our individualism by not accepting certain rules of the group's reality, we do ourselves vulnerable because we may no longer "fit in".

Our egoes desire to maintain that from happening at all costs. After all, what will go of us if we have got no groupings to belong to? I have got seen this fearfulness clasp people so many modern times throughout life in assorted circumstances. Some illustrations include:


· Type Type A adult male too afraid to support a cheery friend of his around a grouping of so-called "tough guys" or "men's men"

· Women who move like best friends in a grouping then assail the fictional character of one of the grouping the minute she walkings away – no substance which one walks away

· A mistreated employee afraid to state direction the truth about their workings statuses or their contiguous supervisor and/or afraid to just quit

· Family and so-called friends distancing themselves from person they have got got known for old age because he or she have shown courageousness to put on the line everything for an ideal which is something they don't have

The hero within you doesn't allow that sort of fearfulness halt you from expressing your truth. Almost everyone says, "I don't care what people think! I make what I believe is right." Yet very few people enactment in conformity with that concept. Your hero walks that talking and lives those statements as a personal motto!

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Sunday, April 15, 2007

Thoughts To Ponder - #113

James Twyman is one of the world's leaders in bringing peace to the earth. Twyman received his Bachelors degree from Loyola University in 1984, and a Doctorate in ministry from Agape Seminary in 1997. He has written five books, Emissary of Light", "Emissary of Love - The Psychic Children Speak to the World", "Proposing Tree: A Love Story", and "Prayer of St. Francis." One role James has played since the beginning, the role he considers to be his central and most important character: The Peace Troubadour.

"We are all learning to live in a way that reflects what we believe, and probably making a few mistakes along the way.

"Still, … keep preparing to step into the Light. I know that is your goal, and it is mine as well. In this we are the same."

"This is a very crucial time in the evolution of humanity toward a much higher consciousness, and some teachings will support that progress while others will not."

"My goal is to help you understand what is "really" happening, the long energetic history that is just now being revealed. Then we will have the power to change things from the source, and the world itself will change."

"Peace is not just a dream but a vibrant reality that exists within each one of us..."

"Nonviolence is the answer for the questions of our time. Love will conquer evil every time."

November 13, 1998, newspaper headlines declared that negotiations with Saddam Hussein had been broken off. The United States was about to attack at any moment. James Twyman, Gregg Braden, and Doreen Virtue were together at a conference in Florida where they had already scheduled a worldwide peace vigil for later that day. Called, "There's Nothing to Fear," again millions of people joined to simultaneously pray for world peace.

"Little did we know," says James, "that on the same day we were holding the worldwide prayer vigil, President Clinton had given the order to attack. Planes were in the air waiting for the order to go ahead and begin the bombing. Within hours of the vigil, Bill Clinton gave an unprecedented stand down order, calling the planes back, not once, but twice. As far as I know, this has never occurred with an executive order."

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