A Small Miracle Of Insight

July 5, 2025

“Sometimes just when we need the power of miracles to change our beliefs, they materialize in the places we’d least expect.  They can come to us as a drastic alteration in our physical reality or as a simple synchronicity in our lives.  Sometimes they’re big and can’t be missed — the vision of Our Lady of the Rosary that appeared to 50,000 people on a hillside near Fatima, Portugal, in 1917, for example.  Other times they’re so subtle that if we aren’t aware, we may miss them altogether.

They can come from the lips of a stranger we suddenly and mysteriously encounter at just the right instant.  If we listen carefully, we’ll always hear the right words, at the right time, to dazzle us into a realization of something that we may have failed to notice only moments before.” 

Gregg Braden tells of his hiking up an Egyptian trail and meeting an Asian man. “Suddenly he stopped directly in front of me on the high side of the trail, looked up from the ground, and spoke a single sentence to me in English: ‘Sometimes you don’t know what you have until you’ve lost it.’ As I took in what I had just heard, he simply stepped around me and continued his descent down the trail.  So seemingly from out of nowhere during my Egyptian pilgrimage, a total stranger had brought clarity to me… in my way of thinking, that’s a miracle.

Try this:  When you go into the world today, before you leave your home, promise yourself that you’ll find at least one miracle.  Without any limits or bounds on what you think it should look like, simply state for yourself your clear intention that of the many miracles that cross your path, you’ll recognize one of them.  Then observe your world closely.  The definition of the word miracle that I want you to use is ‘an event that appears inexplicable by the laws of nature.’  Once you choose to recognize them and accept them in your life, don’t be surprised if they suddenly show up everywhere!”

The Spontaneous Healing Of Belief – Shattering The Paradigm Of False Limits, Gregg Braden, pgs. 181 – 183.

 

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