archetypes-our-role-in-the-world
We're all playing a role (archetype) in this cosmic dance, and it's really strange, because in one respect we are one, just one perfect you know, with God. It's just this perfect presence that we share with God in reality.
Then we came into the earth plane, and on our way in, we seemingly refracted from this one with God into kind of group souls. Group souls are archetypes. Within any archetype there are many, many countless of millions of Souls. But there are these archetypes.
And then we refracted even more into individuality, individual souls. And on earth there's even spiritual teachers that are telling you the importance of you becoming an individual, very unique, and all that does is perpetuate the refraction.
The truth is, as we wake up we will return into the groups, the archetypes, and then into the Oneness with God.
You do need to respect each other's differences, but so that we could become no longer different, if that makes any sense. You don't honor the differences to perpetuate it. You honor it because in honoring it's love. And then the love starts bringing us closer together, or we no longer need to be different.
It's all very messy, very confusing, people that are weird or you know just screwed up humans aren't going to want to hear this, because they're going to be like, "Don't you dare take away my ability to be different from everyone."
God created us one. And God is One. If you insist on being different, all it does is affirm how messed up you are.
That's meaning, "I want to be me. I don't want to be with God," which is OK. You know, that's called a tantrum. You can have tantrums, but it just doesn't bring you peace. So I'm not telling you there's an easy answer, because it's confusing.
All we need to solve the contradiction, all we need to do, is understand it. Which is, we began as one, we will return into oneness. In the meantime we went from being one into variations, but the variations only came from our belief that we separated from God and from each other.
The problem is we became addicted to my being different from everyone else. Why do I need to be different?
Because I want to be special. All that is, is an insecurity talking. There are people that are afraid of becoming one with God because they think, "I am afraid of disappearing."
That might not be a bad thing if you look at yourself once in a while. Your behaviors might not be such a bad thing for you and your behaviors to disappear into love, you know?
So each of us, though, is seemingly playing a part. And we have to start learning to look at that. What part do you want to play? If you die tomorrow, what part would you be most happy, a state of joy. What would bring you a state of joy for the part you play?
Is the part you play right now today, enough? You could say there's an orchestra and each person plays a part. Or if somebody is building a house, you have electricians, you have carpenters.
Everybody's playing a part. So in life, it's the same thing. We can say, you know, each person...we can be all poetic for a second. Poetic not literally, but just meaning kind of beautiful. Isn't it amazing that carpenters, electricians, each play their part? You'd be like, "Aw, that's so beautiful," but I'm not done yet.
Because we're all playing a role. It's just an act, and we're all just each playing a part. So the orchestra, each person's playing in the orchestra, their part.
And when we go look at that amazing violinist, until they lose their individuality and play together, the orchestra isn't really doing its fullest. If you want to be a soloist, why have the rest of us there?
So in the orchestra, we can say each person is playing a part, and that's beautiful. But I'm saying, in a sense the greatest of them is coming out when they let go of their individuality and become part of something.
Much like us. We sit and kind of praise how each person, it's a magnificent thing, look at an orchestra and all the people playing the part. We're forgetting, though, that it's the oneness that brings the best out of everyone. But that takes letting go of our need to be special. Our need to stand out.
We probably all have seen a movie somewhere out there where someone out in that orchestra either starts blowing their part or starts wanting to stand out above all the rest. And it creates, in a sense, no matter how talented they are, it creates what we call inharmony.
Something breaks up. Something's not quite right. So when we look at the world, we should start to recognize for now, for a second, that everything plays its part.
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*BC/
#MichaelMirdad
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Please watch: "Empathy, Sympathy, and Apathy"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yj8MUR4i2PM
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVOD08rLsMY
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3 weeks ago
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English