03-17-2013, 10:52 AM
I believe that negative orientation is badly misunderstood. It's true that the 3D consequence of negativity ultimately results in what we perceive as "evil", and that Earth is undoubtedly a world in which the tendency to negativity has exceeded what might be thought desirable.
However, in spiritual realms, time is of no consequence, and both positive and negative must form part of a balanced evolutionary path. Do you remember those endless days at school spent reading dreary textbooks and completing endless "exercizes"? Yet eventually they proved worthwhile, albeit in varying degree. One of the most exemplary cases is that of Jackie Chan. If you've seen his biography, you'll know that his parents, being poor, sent him to a traditional Chinese Opera company as a child, and he underwent interminable hours with his legs splayed up a wall, and other painful training processes, unable even to relieve the calls of Nature until the exercize was finished. When asked about this, he replied, "Yes, of course I hated it; but now I value what it has given me."
To drop into negativity in the present circumstances may rightly be thought regrettable - it's certainly not something I'd personally relish - but as a tiny (atomic) event within galactic evolution it's nothing remarkable.
That which we fear often overtakes us simply because of our fear of it. Forget being a wanderer, and the Harvest, and the negative/positive polarity. Simply learn to understand why you're here and what it is you want to achieve. I've accepted a fair degree of negativity in my own makeup, desires, and expectations, but don't seem to have tipped the balance too far. It's not a black-and-white thing, but a matter of degree. Those who strive to be whiter-than-white will eventually become badly soiled.
However, in spiritual realms, time is of no consequence, and both positive and negative must form part of a balanced evolutionary path. Do you remember those endless days at school spent reading dreary textbooks and completing endless "exercizes"? Yet eventually they proved worthwhile, albeit in varying degree. One of the most exemplary cases is that of Jackie Chan. If you've seen his biography, you'll know that his parents, being poor, sent him to a traditional Chinese Opera company as a child, and he underwent interminable hours with his legs splayed up a wall, and other painful training processes, unable even to relieve the calls of Nature until the exercize was finished. When asked about this, he replied, "Yes, of course I hated it; but now I value what it has given me."
To drop into negativity in the present circumstances may rightly be thought regrettable - it's certainly not something I'd personally relish - but as a tiny (atomic) event within galactic evolution it's nothing remarkable.
That which we fear often overtakes us simply because of our fear of it. Forget being a wanderer, and the Harvest, and the negative/positive polarity. Simply learn to understand why you're here and what it is you want to achieve. I've accepted a fair degree of negativity in my own makeup, desires, and expectations, but don't seem to have tipped the balance too far. It's not a black-and-white thing, but a matter of degree. Those who strive to be whiter-than-white will eventually become badly soiled.