
Chat made me this
How do I prove the reality of an archangel? How do I convey the dawning of understanding when a heavy concrete planter that I have to get into a tall dumpster suddenly becomes weightless?
Or when I see a kitchen fire rise up to the ceiling and then just as quickly return to the frying pan?
Or when, as an explorative young adult, I’m offered a large amount of a very addictive substance, which I imbibe without feeling any sensation? What’s the buzz all about? I’m not doing this stuff.
Or, in a moment of distraction, I cut an electric wire while it’s still connected. I burn a hole in my scissors yet I’m not affected.
Or how I got past getting a reference from my last manager, who was a crook. (1)
Those are all the “miracles” I can remember. And when I ask Michael about them, he says things like, “Oh, we didn’t want you messing with that,” or “it was no problem to redirect a few electrons,” or “there was nothing to be gained by burning down the whole building.”
The paradigm that excludes what we can’t see, touch, or hear is called empirical materialism. Chat, define empirical materialism please:
Empirical materialism is the view that only the physical world exists and that we know about it through empirical observation and scientific evidence.
Thank you. So those invisible spaceships above us don’t exist. Michael doesn’t exist. The Divine Mother/Father One doesn’t exist.
There’s no reason to love your neighbor. And life has no purpose or destination so pass the bottle, friend. Misery loves company.
I don’t want to live in such a world. Everything “finer” about me – service, reverence, gentleness – gets put back into the closet. There’s nothing to be gained from living in that world or leaving it since life is purposeless.
Fortunately life is not that way. The greater part of life, dimension upon dimension, exists beyond the reach of our 3D human senses. All our transitioned relatives are carrying on, most having perfectly-wonderful lives beyond our ability to see and hear them. Etc.
Life has eternal purpose: That God should meet God in a moment of our enlightenment: “O Thou I!” (2) Life’s purpose is unfolded in the surfacing of the divine qualities that live inside this dense body. In the experience of a love beyond imagining.
Empirical materialism is too small a box to contain life or even to describe it. It must take its place with such curiosities as Earth-centered astronomy and law-of-the-jungle economics.
And thank heavens for that because all these exploitative paradigms have brought have been endless misery from anyone outside the circle of the elite. Misery that is not a part of the Divine Plan.
Misery will not win out, the Divine Mother tells us:
Make no mistake, Sweet one. Love will win because that has been my Plan always. (3)
But, of course, the adherent of empirical materialism will here smile, indulgently, and call what I say unproven and speculative.
And I, sitting here breathing love up from my heart and smiling blissfully, no longer care for their opinions. The time of separation is here. The Wave of Love will escort them to their next adventures.
I have found my path and here is where we part.
Footnotes
(1) The manager was sick and the husband answered. When my rental agent asked if she could call back tomorrow, the husband shouted “F OFF!” and slammed down the phone. I asked my rental agent, “What more can I say?” I asked Michael, “What did you do?” And he said he just helped along his natural tendencies.
Otherwise I don’t know how I would have gotten past the two of them, who were petty criminals. I moved out to escape them.
(2) Bayazid of Bistun in Aldous Huxley, The Perennial Philosophy. New York, etc.: Harper and Row, 1970; c1944, 12.
On life’s purpose, see The Purpose of Life is Enlightenment at https://goldenageofgaia.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Purpose-of-Life-is-Enlightenment-6.pdf, particularly “Chapter 13. Epilogue.”
(3) Divine Mother in a personal reading with Steve Beckow through Linda Dillon, April 30, 2019.
