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These are apparently not the highest reasons to want to meliorate ourselves. They are, in fact, kinda selfish motives. If we want to change to ensure our safety, or so others module accept us, we are simply replacing the touchable ego with the sacred ego. Nothing has rattling changed. In some cases, our requirement to fulfill these sacred “requirements” for our self-acceptance has to do with our requirement to see we are more sacred than others. Thus, we simply replace the requirement for statement and superiority on a touchable level with the same requirement on the sacred level. It is essential to realize that our self-worth is imperishable and divine. We cannot be worth more or less in God’s eyes. We are glorious knowingness itself in the process of evolving our knowledge to express our divinity on the touchable planes. Our inherent sacred value is not denaturized by our actions or sacred growth. What is denaturized is our knowledge to express those values mentally, emotionally and physically. Desiring to become a clearer channel for glorious energies of love, peace, harmony, official and happiness is a such better motive. Seeking to purify ourselves so we can experience that Divine Consciousness in every existence and event that we encounter, is a useful motive. Seeking to vanish all mental, emotional and physical obstacles so that we can prepare pure love, simplicity and selflessness is also useful.
Such motives are free from the mettlesome of who is sacred and who is not, or who is more spiritual, or who is beatific and who is bad, and whom God loves and whom God does not love. They are based on the assumption that God is a such higher type of consciousness, and thus is incapable of not loving anyone no concern what that person strength ever do. This seems exclusive logical since the Divine Being has asked us, plain humans, to fuck even our enemies and those who ignore and alteration us. Is it possible then that It is incapable of doing so? This type of thinking also removes us from the mettlesome of sacred feel in which we see that we are higher, more important, or more favored by God than others. It also frees us from feeling we are lower, less essential or less favored by God than others. The touchable ego, on the other hand, tends to react in such situations to the rejection and push it receives from the sacred ego by rebelling and sabotaging its different efforts toward discipline, self-control and self-improvement. Thus, the more we push ourselves, the more our touchable ego reacts and rebels. In such cases, we experience disequilibrium in our sacred or self-improvement efforts. In these cases, we usually play the roles of parent and female with our possess selves. The parent in us rejects the female in us for not existence a “good child,” and the female then reacts so as to undermine the parents’ effort toward control. |