Feeling Good!

“It’s not about personalities. It’s about loving and seeing something to appreciate everywhere and in everyone.

It’s not about how lovable anybody else is.  It’s about, “Am I choosing to see through the eyes of Source/God/dog, who loves and adores everything and everybody 😍?”

“Do I feel good or do I make my point?” After decades of opinions and activism (resistance and need to control), all that contrast brought clarity.  I am now addicted to appreciating.

Feeling good totally rocks! 🎉” 

Carol-Lani Rose

Your Happiness

“Tell everyone you know: “My happiness depends on me, so you’re off the hook.” And then demonstrate it. Be happy, no matter what they’re doing. Practice feeling good, no matter what.

And before you know it, you will not give anyone else responsibility for the way you feel — and then, you’ll love them all. Because the only reason you don’t love them, is because you’re using them as your excuse to not feel good.”

Abraham-Hicks, April 30th, 2005

A Better Way

“Why do humans fight so?  It is learned behavior and it is wired into the body.  It is a combination of the two.  You are programmed to protect the self.  Fight or flight is hard to avoid when threatened.

You learn to act on this even when the threat has passed, causing you to become blind to alternative ways of dealing with those who do not think as you do.

Fighting is necessary for self-preservation, but always remember there is a self and a Self.  (self = little you, Self = Higher You) As you get caught in the throes of a physical reaction, maintain enough awareness to ask of the Self, ‘Is there a better way?’

You are so very loved.”

The post A Better Way appeared first on Suzanne Giesemann.

Take Responsibility

“Solving a problem means that we take responsibility for it.  ‘This is my problem.  I will study it.  I will master it. I will take responsibility for it.  I will act to do that which I can do.’

Taking responsibility is not something that is encouraged.  We are encouraged to be victims. We are encouraged to blame ‘them.’  In doing so, we give away our power.  We reject the opportunity to accept responsibility, to identify our complicity in the process, and, by changing how we feel and act, to reinvent our world individually and collectively.”

Dispelling Wetiko: Breaking the Curse of Evil by Paul Levy . (Wetiko is a Cree Indian term for a wicked person or spirit that terrorizes others.)