Kathleen incorporated a passage from Sanat Kumara in a recent article, where he invited us to send loving thought each day to a person, as well as our food and drink.
The comment came up on An Hour with an Angel when I asked him where we should go next, after having meditated for rain and peace, and he said into “tender, gentle, loving relationships.”
“Every day engage either mentally, esoterically or actually in a kind and loving exchange of relationship that is expressive and reflective and in alignment with how you love and treat yourself and, in reciprocity, how you love and wish to be treated every day.
“Then formulate the same relationship with prayer, meditation, intent with your water and with your food. If you were to do these very simple and most difficult three things: individual, your water, and your food. Kind, loving, nurturing and gentle, for one month, and we, I offer you a date my friend, and we were to revisit this in one month, the shift upon your planet would be unbelievable. I do not say significant. I say unbelievable.” (1)
Those are pretty bold words, noteworthy in themselves. But I’m interested in his choice of words: tender, gentle, loving, kind, nurturing.
So you’re getting a fairly-male male encountering these kinds of concepts for perhaps the first time: tender, gentle, kind. Hmmmm….
Where’s hard-charging, last man standing, winner takes all?
What we’ve been calling sacred love, universal love, real love leaves me in a place when I am tender, gentle, and kind. That’s for sure.
But to be those ways when I’m not in the space of universal love, because, as actions, they’re appropriate to the desired outcome of being again in it – that had never occurred to me. It isn’t a male response.
I assume that those qualities help to call that space into being or at least tenderize me to it or have me be aware of it.
Just look at me. Once thrown bodily into the Ganges of Love, one hungers for it, schemes for it, plans for a return dip ever after. I don’t care how awkward I feel as a hard-charging male being tender.
I don’t care because I’ve tasted universal love and I can see that nothing else really matters than to experience it myself and share it with as many people as I possibly can. As Kathleen says, that’s spiritual currency and a change of values in the area is the Spiritual Reval.
Footnotes
(1) 1977: Out-of-body experience. 1987: The vision. 1997: Enlightenment Intensives and experiences. More recently, a major experience a year: System Restore, Heart Opening, Bliss, Peace. The pace has definitely picked up.