As I listened to the self-help author narrate his journey of woes,
I kept saying “I love you” quietly, inside my mind, to the Divine. By
the time he was done talking, he seemed lighter and happier.
As Dr. Hew Len keeps reminding me and everyone else, “The Di-
vine is not a concierge.You don’t ask for things; you just clean.”
I loved spending time with Dr. Hew Len. He never seemed to
mind my questions. One day I asked him if there were any advanced
methods for cleaning. After all, he has been doing ho’oponopono for
more than 25 years. Surely he’s created or received some other meth-
ods besides “I love you” to clear memories.
“What do you do these days to clean?” I asked.
He chuckled and said,“Kill the Divine.”
I was stunned.
“Kill the Divine?” I repeated, wondering what he meant.
“I know that even inspiration is one step removed from the zero
state,” he explained.“I’m told that I have to kill the Divine to be home.”
“But how do you kill the Divine?”
“Keep cleaning,” he said.
Always, always, always, it kept coming back to the one singular
refrain that healed any and all wounds: “I love you, I’m sorry, please
forgive me, thank you.”
When I was in Warsaw, Poland, at the end of 2006, I decided to in-
troduce the idea of zero limits and the zero state to my audience. I
had been there speaking for two days about hypnotic marketing
and my book,The Attractor Factor. I found the people to be open-
minded, loving, and eager to learn. So I taught them what I’ve
shared with you here: that you are responsible for everything in
your life and that the way to heal everything is with a simple “I
love you.”
Though the audience needed a translator for my presentation,
they seemed to absorb my every word. But one person asked me an
interesting question:
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