10-10-2017, 09:54 AM
First, I echo the advice of others: talk here about the stuff that interests you.
Second, it's important to recognize your role in relation to this information. In spite of how impossible it seems, you will run into people who show interest and want to learn about this information. The question then becomes how to recognize this condition.
As far as I can tell, the more at home you are in your own skin with respect to what you believe, the more comfortable people will be in opening up to what you have to share. This means balance, taking the information and really chewing on it. A lot of times when we first discover information like this we want to share it all, but we don't realize how much preparation we've undergone in order to seat this information in useful position in our minds. Then we simply bombard others with details that don't show them the same level of patience and methodicalness that we showed ourselves when we were first exploring. Writing can be a good way to achieve a balance, taking apart these ideas and putting them together conceptually so you can identify inroads into understanding that would help you communicate. But I also think just allowing yourself to calm down and become more comfortable with these ideas is good, too, because this will allow you to express the idea without an overriding excitement or urgency that causes people to put their defenses up automatically.
Third, consider the idea that there is an underlying current to this information that is more subtle, universal, and unifying than the particular ways you're conceiving of it. That underlying current is the thing that is of most value, because that is the thing about the information that is closest to love. And the challenge of our incarnations lies in how we channel this love in our daily interactions, without necessarily having to involve the specific constructs of technical or spiritual knowledge. You will always teach best by example. You will always engender the most interest in this information by demonstrating how using it makes you a more balanced, loving, caring person. This draws people in and helps them let down their defenses so they can truly be open to new ideas.
So patience, balance, and channeling this information in your daily behavior are the three pieces of advice I have for you, in addition to continuing to let us provide you a sympathetic ear.
Second, it's important to recognize your role in relation to this information. In spite of how impossible it seems, you will run into people who show interest and want to learn about this information. The question then becomes how to recognize this condition.
As far as I can tell, the more at home you are in your own skin with respect to what you believe, the more comfortable people will be in opening up to what you have to share. This means balance, taking the information and really chewing on it. A lot of times when we first discover information like this we want to share it all, but we don't realize how much preparation we've undergone in order to seat this information in useful position in our minds. Then we simply bombard others with details that don't show them the same level of patience and methodicalness that we showed ourselves when we were first exploring. Writing can be a good way to achieve a balance, taking apart these ideas and putting them together conceptually so you can identify inroads into understanding that would help you communicate. But I also think just allowing yourself to calm down and become more comfortable with these ideas is good, too, because this will allow you to express the idea without an overriding excitement or urgency that causes people to put their defenses up automatically.
Third, consider the idea that there is an underlying current to this information that is more subtle, universal, and unifying than the particular ways you're conceiving of it. That underlying current is the thing that is of most value, because that is the thing about the information that is closest to love. And the challenge of our incarnations lies in how we channel this love in our daily interactions, without necessarily having to involve the specific constructs of technical or spiritual knowledge. You will always teach best by example. You will always engender the most interest in this information by demonstrating how using it makes you a more balanced, loving, caring person. This draws people in and helps them let down their defenses so they can truly be open to new ideas.
So patience, balance, and channeling this information in your daily behavior are the three pieces of advice I have for you, in addition to continuing to let us provide you a sympathetic ear.