Aspire Magazine: Inspiration for a Woman's Soul.(TM) April/May 2020 Aspire Magazine FULL Issue | Page 25
How can our own individual selves influence
or have any impact on a world of 7 billion
people? We know intellectually, and we say
glibly many times, that we are all One, but
I would hazard a guess that the majority of
us rarely feel at oneness with the rest of the
world - the good, the bad and the ugly.
Programmed so much in our separateness
to feel this on a regular basis we will all
have had moments of peaceful and positive
solidarity with a group of people who were
on the same wavelength as ourselves in a
certain moment. That moment would have
felt really good. It would have felt good
because it would have reminded us of our
innate nature. Our innate nature is one of
light energy existing in a dimension of love. In
this human experience we forget that. This is
why we crave love personally. This is why we
go in search of it outside of ourselves. This
is why when we don’t access it, we can feel
disconnected, depressed, and suffer from
feelings of worthlessness and lack of hope.
If our attempts to get love from another,
leaves us alone or heartbroken, we can
cut ourselves off from it in self-defense and
thereby disconnecting ourselves even more
from ever experiencing it again.
The title of this article declares a bold
statement that puts the concept of a ‘Healed
World’ squarely on our own laps. I do
believe that as humanity has slowly evolved
throughout eons, we have always failed to
figure out how to do this. One of the reasons I
OUR INNATE
NATURE IS
love) . It is what peace is are made up of.
We can access this emotion on our own,
through meditation, spiritual paths and faith,
but when we want to feel this for our world at
large, it becomes more difficult.
ONE OF LIGHT
ENERGY EXISTING
IN A DIMENSION
OF LOVE.
believe is certainly looking to another to be
the hero. Its why we have so many super
hero movies and stories. We love a hero that
saves the day for the masses all yearning to
be rescued and loved. We did this with our
tribal leaders, our Kings and Queens and
our elected governmental officials.
The times we are in however, no longer
require us to search out a hero to save
the day. The hero, and excuse the cliché,
is deep within us. It feels annoying to hear
this because that means for most of us, we
ourselves, actually have to do something
about it. It’s much easier to reach out to
another to save and love us into worthiness,
than do our own hard work.
We have always looked to our parents,
friends and our romantic relationships to
give us what we feel we need. A need to feel
loved and lovable, worthy and valuable, seen,
heard and championed. Of course, when the
others out there fail to deliver for one reason
or another, we then retreat back into feeling
unloved, unlovable and worthless.
25