Monday, April 22, 2013

You Are What You Think



Today is a bit of continuation from yesterday.  

I thought I would give you additional examples of how disease may reflect it’s energy pattern in your life by reflecting what is bothering you at a conscious or subconscious level.  

Inside yourself you may have thoughts keeping your mind tied up for hours, or something you’re wanting to avoid acknowledging, but it’s worth facing. 

It’s all okay, in time we are all pushed to confront these things. 

The quote to the left is from Buddha; biblically it states "As a man thinketh in his heart so is he."  The great religions of the world are in agreement, they just state it differently. 


Example:

You can’t stand being around someone who is lethargic, seemingly lazy and always is in crisis with a major disease.  You’re phobic of them. That person with the disease may be afraid to thrive. 

You’re in reaction, you better look at why you are avoiding or reacting to them in a fearful way. Are you afraid to be that way?  Is there a part of you that you know is lazy? Have you been that way?  Is there a part of you that you feel is not worth being alive?  

Address whichever thought is the trigger; it’s wasting your energy.  The reaction is your disease, the person who is sick, that is their disease. There may be multiple triggers. 
What arises in you is for you to deal with.  Your perceptions are your reality and reflect how you perceive the world around you.   

It is your responsibility to clear that which in you perceives the person, place or thing as a problem, it arose in you as a reaction, it is not your fault, but it is your responsibility to heal that part of you that perceives the problem.   

Only you make your judgments and create your perceptions of your world within your mind, you can choose to change it.  

Address the issues and there will be no repulsion of that person, and peace ensues.  Perhaps the peace will decrease symptoms or relieve not only dis-ease, but the disease. 
Example: 

People with large egos, sometimes have repulsion to other people with large egos and they will be the first to comment on their dislike of another.  Isn’t that interesting?  You gotta just keep a smile on your face.  Life is humorous that way.  

Are you in reaction to someone else’s large ego? That reaction would be a clue to look within to see where your actions are from ego.   

Ego is not necessarily bad, there are times when it serves us.  If you feel so small in life and can’t bear to go forward, Source provides you the wherewithal to move forward from the ego.  Ego will hold you up.   

You will eventually be lead to determine why you feel the need for ego to hold you up and push you forward.  If you start to see this, you can start to be thankful for it and how it served you, you will then be shown paths to change the false belief.  

Looking within at this dis-ease pattern reveals our inner core truths.  The truths may no longer be serving you and you need to address them. This is what I do as a spiritual healer and it works.

If you need assistance in your healing on this journey, I can help you.  I help people remove those sneaky subconscious judgments and false beliefs that are creating misery in their life.  I work remotely.  Feeling old patterns leave sets you free, symptoms disperse, diseases may go away, and living gets better.

Dr. Samantha Joseph
http://www.beempowerednow.net

Phone:
316-685-1581

2 comments:

  1. Hi Dr. Samantha. Thanks for the post. You made me think for a while there with - 'You can’t stand being around someone who is lethargic, seemingly lazy and always is in crisis with a major disease. You’re phobic of them'. I never wondered why I avoided them but I guess it is because I have a hard time being around people who are lethargic and lazy. Just feels like an energy sap to me. Sick people, I don't mind being around, though.

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    Replies
    1. Carlana, naturally you may feel depleted around those people, but is it because their is an inner repulsion or fear of being around them. Does it agitate you? They are exhausting at times, but look inside to see if they reflect an aspect of yourself you dislike, or a quality you abhor. It's really quite individual. Once you start to have compassion for them, its not so draining, but it starts with clearing yourself. This is my experience wondering why I was so affected as well.

      I'm happy I made you stop and reflect, thanks.
      Dr. Samantha Joseph

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