Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Is poverty a sin?
Excellent question and blog post from Randy Gage. You can read it here.
Much of this subject is really about, deserving and worthiness issues within ourselves. We hold so many patterns of these lack thoughts, behaviors and habits and often, we aren't even aware of them. They are simply a part of the daily noise in our life. We flip on the TV and hear the negative jibberish of that tragedy and listen to the radio and catch more tragic jabber and then we elevate ourselves with external recognitions in "how much we know" about the current events of the day. And what exactly can we do about these events as we tread the water of "overwhelm"? Not very much when we start thinking of how global the problems are and how big our own problems are and, and, and, and. We get caught in an endless loop of stuck, lack and overwhelm.
Maybe we have read some books or attended a seminar or really thought about moving ourselves into a more prosperous mindset, then find ourselves dragged back into our old habits because, well they are comfortable, they are known and they are commiserated with. It's uncomfortable and scary to try to move out of lack thinking. It's uncharted territory for many.
Today isn't the day to go into our own journey in specifics, but our feet are on the journey and we constantly, consistently, persistently continue to course correct when we wander off the path of this journey. We've hit brambles, snags, fallen into dips, stubbed our toes, wrenched our ankles and limped or rested for various times. We've face-planted in the mud, been stung by wasps and had to change and grow and stretch.
Many of the ways we have been able to work through these issues is with the use of EFT or Meridian Tapping. This process takes your stuckness and releases it, so you can move forward out of lack and into prosperity.
Look forward to a new EFT call on this subject to explore and re-define your relationship with the idea of wealth, poverty and sin. It'll rock your socks off, it has ours!
Thank you Randy Gage, Napolean Hill, T. Harv Eker, Bob Doyle, Wallace Wattles, Jeffery Gitomer, Christine Comaford, Dan Millman, Gary Craig, Carol Look and many, many, many, many others for being partners on our continuing journey.
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