Healing and Hypnotherapy Volume- 3, Issue - 5, 1 November 2018 | Page 7
Saturday, 6 October 2018
By limiting yourself financially, you would be limiting the amount of
good you could do in the world. Having to continue doing unrelated
work just to pay the bills would curtail the time you could devote to
any spiritual mission. What’s more, if you were independently wealthy,
you could travel to more places, meet more people, and offer your
books and seminars more inexpensively to those with lower incomes
who typically can’t afford such extravagances.
Even if spiritual teaching is not your calling, then needing to
attract money to sustain yourself keeps you grounded and connected
with meeting the true needs of society. Money creates relationships
with those you share it with, and relationships can help your spiritual
development. Money can be a wonderful resource to purchase such
things as books, seminars, and counseling that can aid in your
spiritual development. It can buy time for spiritual studies, practice
and retreats and trainings.
Money can provide for your physical health and the sense of
well-being necessary to be of service to others. How can you help
others if you’re sick or tired? Money is also needed for the tools, staff,
buildings, etc. to make your service more effective in the world.
Having a lot of money can enable you to move at all levels of society
as needed for your service, whatever that may be.
By blocking yourself from tapping into the financial abundance
that is your birthright you will effectively be compromising the quality
of every area of your life – mental, physical, emotional and spiritual.
After all, living with joy, love, beauty, abundance, and passion is a
package deal - if you suppress one then you can’t fully embody the
others. By definition, a holistic life cannot be compartmentalized.
Throughout my book….. we’ve discussed the concept of Karma
and looked at its various forms in various circumstances. We’ve also
explained Karma by using different analogies. Permit me to draw one
additional analogy, i.e. that of a bank.
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