“I love you.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Please forgive me.”
“Thank you.”
As we went through this first weekend event, the phrase “I love
you” became part of my mental chatter. Just as sometimes you wake
up with a song playing in your head, I’d wake up hearing “I love
you” in my head.Whether I consciously said it or not, it was there. It
was a beautiful feeling. I didn’t know how it was clearing anything,
but I did it anyway. How could “I love you” be bad in any way, shape,
or form?
At one point in the event, Dr. Hew Len again singled me out. He
asked, “Joseph, how do you know whether something is a memory
or an inspiration?”
I didn’t understand the question and said so.
“How do you know if someone who gets cancer gave it to
themselves or it was given to them by the Divine as a challenge to
help them?”
I was silent for a moment. I tried to process the question. How
doyou know when an event is from your own mind or from the
mind of the Divine?
“I have no idea,” I replied.
“And neither do I,” Dr. Hew Len said.“And that’s why you have
to constantly clean, clean, clean.You have to clean on anything and
everything, as you have no idea what is a memory and what is inspi-
ration. You clean to get to a place of zero limits, which is the zero
state.”
Dr. Hew Len states that our minds have a tiny view of the world,
and that view is not only incomplete but also inaccurate. I didn’t
buy this concept until I picked up the book,The Wayward Mindby
Guy Claxton.
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