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NOTE:
This
answer was given on July 14, 2007, during the Shangra-la conference
in Los Angeles, California.
Answer from Saint Germain:
No my beloved. This is a cycle that has passed, and what we need the
spiritual people to do today is what I talked about during this conference,
of locking in to the vision of the Golden Age as a reality that is already
manifest.
Surely, in the Golden Age you would not expect to have a hole in the
ground, where you can crawl down because of some outbreak of war that
is clearly NOT in accordance with a Golden Age vision and matrix. So
it is indeed advantageous for people to simply let this go and say it
served its purpose for a time.
My beloved, it is perfectly acceptable to put training wheels on a bicycle
when a child is learning to hold the balance. But if the child keeps
the training wheels into adult age, well then you have to consider that
something has not quite clicked in the mind of that person. And so do
not look back at the past with regret. What you did was necessary for
many reasons, including the entire learning process that is possible
as a result of this experience.
It would therefore be very dear to my heart if the people who were involved
in that experience would openly talk about it and process the entire
experience, so that they could learn the lessons that they need to learn—the
deeper lessons that can be learned and that can help people grow on
the spiritual path, lessons that are far beyond the actual outer events.
For as I have said, we always look to the ongoingness of everything.
And those who are our students—we are always holding the vision
that they will move on, leave the past cycles behind and rise to an
entirely new level of consciousness where you have no regrets, no resentment,
no attachments to the past. You realize that this was a cycle that you
had to go through in order to rise higher in consciousness. And you
are perfectly content to have gone through that cycle, having learned
those lessons, and therefore now being in a much higher place than you
would have been had you not been willing to go through that experience.
This of course applies to many other aspects of life, where you go through
difficult situations that you might have preferred to have avoided.
But nevertheless, seen from a larger perspective, they taught you something
that you could not have learned otherwise, or could not have learned
as quickly.
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Copyright
© 2007 by Kim Michaels |