December 24th, 2019
QUESTION: Masters, you have stated that elder souls choose more
difficult lives. While I feel like an old soul, I cannot help but think that I
am not affected enough by my life. When I have a low point in my life and deal
with intense feelings, I get through it quickly. My life situations have not
been glamorous, and I have been taken into a foster home because of a difficult
family background. Four of my five siblings have been taken away by social
workers as well. There are a lot of mental illnesses in my family, but I feel
like I am just observing everything and guiding others. Though I must admit
that observing life around me has taught me efficiently while giving me
many insights. I love life and treasure every
moment. What exactly is “difficult”? ~J., Finland
ANSWER: Don’t worry about choosing an unencumbered, less-difficult
life for once. You are an elder soul who has incarnated hundreds of times, and
sometimes you choose to work on very difficult issues that you were unable to
understand in a prior life, or something you have not tried before. Rarely,
after a series of hard lives, you choose to come to share your wisdom and have
a little rest and relaxation on the only place where you can enjoy the physical
sensitivities of a human body.
You are learning and
expanding your understanding and wisdom – as you have noticed –
when you reface a previous lesson, remember how you handled it before, and send
it on its way without difficulty. Your environment would be devastating to many,
but because of your use of essential powers and abilities, it seems almost tame
to you.
Observation allows a
soul to learn many things from varying viewpoints all at the same time. And
guiding others from your knowledge is a sacred task you have chosen throughout
many lifetimes.
When we advise
others that older souls choose more difficult lessons, we mean that they often
want to complete something they started and were unable to finish in another incarnation.
You are taking the time to step back from individual tasks, observe other
possibilities you may not have considered, and pass on what you have learned to
those in need.
Life is so full of
love because you allow it. Continue on with this blissful existence – you never
know what you will choose if you decide to come back.
Posted in Life Lessons | Comments Off on Elder souls
December 17th, 2019
QUESTION:
Masters I want to know your teachings
about suicide. I am a health professional and our background support the life
defense paradigm. So, we work to prevent and intervene in situations of
ideation, attempted suicide and consummate suicide, being considered a public
health problem. What teachings can clarify about free will and the health
intervention? ~Duda, Brazil
ANSWER: Every soul has the freedom of choice to determine what they
wish to learn when they have incarnated on Earth. One valid lesson is suicide.
They may have agreed with some other souls to be the subject so that all can
experience the trauma. Or they may be overwhelmed from trying to do more than
they are capable of completing in one lifetime, and they want to exit this
existence and come back later with fewer challenges.
Some souls even
choose it as a lesson to deal with the societal feelings about suicide – the
very things with which you deal in your work. Society doesn’t want to lose any
of its potential citizens, so it seeks, through therapists, to discourage
suicide by counseling those who are considering it as an alternative to
remaining.
In the case of those
souls who have chosen to work with suicide as a life lesson, you are assisting
them with their understanding about it. Regardless of your therapies, they
still have the freedom to listen and comprehend your position or to deny that
they wish to change their opinions and future actions.
To truly learn a
lesson, a soul has to explore all aspects of it and the implications of the
various choices connected to it. You are providing them a list of choices in
dealing with their lesson – options they may never have considered. You really
don’t have a choice to exercise if you are unaware of what the options are.
Of course, these are
not issues dealt with in a professional school, unless it has a spiritual
basis. Continue doing your job as it has been taught to you, understanding that
it is still up to each soul to make their own choices once they know what they
are, and what you do cannot influence them unless they allow it to do so.
Posted in Planet Earth | Comments Off on Suicide and society
December 17th, 2019
QUESTION: Masters over ten years ago when I was diagnosed with breast
cancer, my two children announced, “Dad told us we didn’t have to take
care of a parent.” I got over my shock, hurt, respected their right of
choice and moved on. I embraced your teachings to be true to my soul’s lesson
plan first, doing whatever makes me happy. After a full recovery, I remarried a
lovely man, and we are now traveling the world. I have focused on being kind,
compassionate, loving wherever I go. My kids,
now age 27 and 30, recently issued an email
ultimatum that I return “home” and behave like a “normal
mother” or I am not welcome as their mother anymore. I am flourishing,
healthy and living my life to the fullest without them. Is cutting off ALL
further contact with my kids now in the Highest and Greatest Good for all
concerned? ~Mary Anne, Australia
ANSWER: Your children are very selfish and manipulative and want to
have you available to assist them with their lives when they deem it necessary.
Ignore them as they ignored your needs so many years ago. Just as then, the
only thing that is important to you should be your own journey and what you
have learned along the way. You have done a marvelous job learning that lesson
– each soul has responsibility only for learning about themselves.
Your response to
them should be that you don’t have to take care of adult children. To them, a
normal mother is one who is at the beck and call of the children to run
errands, babysit, and help get things ready for their entertaining. You do not
need to have their title and definition of mother in your vocabulary.
They are also a
little jealous of the life you and your husband have made after all you went
through. Your ex, as well, has conveyed to them his disquiet that your life is
so much better than his. They harbor a good deal of guilt for the way they
treated you and think it will all be excused if you “join” into their lives
now. You still have freedom of choice.
If they wish to make
demands of you “as their mother,” they have to understand that it is a two-way
street: you have no need for them now, and they chose to stay away when there
was a need. If they wish to create a gulf between you if you fail to meet their
demands, then so be it.
Cutting the apron
strings was done a long time ago, but disconnecting the communication line is
up to you. What is for your highest and greatest good is what feels right to
you. Your desire to be kind, compassionate, and loving can come with a huge
price tag – losing yourself for the benefit of another. Remember your lessons.
Posted in Relationships | Comments Off on When is enough, enough?