Going against what may seem logical and systematic
In reply to To move or to hold on by Vimal
Comment
Hi Vimal - if I get a sign like, "you'll be there for 1 year", I don't take that as fixed or certain. But if the sign itself clicks and spikes in the field which I clearly feel, then I'll step in that direction. For example, in renting a place, I'll make sure I don't have to commit to longer than that period. And it will influence the degree to which I establish myself there. But it's definitely not fixed. When you say you have to give prior notice 'weeks before', well that could likely be a part of how the flow needs to crystallise here in the matrix to fulfill an agreement. But work to soften the mind even around that - what if a typhoon swept through the whole area, then you definitely wouldn't be tied to the agreement!
The point being that there's a flowing interplay with the system istelf and everything is now changing. You can step in a certain direction that feels right, but that doesn't mean things are fixed.
I recall being at an airport once heading toward a gate to catch a flight and the synchronic9ty in the flow (I left the 9 in synhcronicity because that's how it typed and 9 is the number of the higher dimensional Openhand team) caused me to notice a particular couple of people. I wasn't sure why, they just spiked in my attention. I was waiting in the queue for boarding to start, and wondering why it hadn't already begun, when suddenly again my attention was drawn to the couple, wlaking off in the other direction. Even though I was waiting for my plane, something said "follow them". I know enough not to ignore guidance when I clearly feel it, even if it seems completely illogical. So I followed them. It turns out they were getting on the same flight as me, but the gate had been changed, which I didn't know about. I was the last person on the plane and the door closed right behind me!
The invitation is to get used to this degree of flexibility, even if it seems to go against the logical and systematic.
Open ![]()
