DWQA Questions › Tag: soul journeyFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesRarely is justice swift, and when it is, it is often unjust itself. This puts the victim in a kind of limbo waiting for closure that may be long in coming. This leaves the victim, as well as onlookers, feeling powerless. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma395 views0 answers0 votesThis whole notion of closure seems less than ideal. It is regarded as of the utmost importance to achieve, and yet, in the end, how much does it actually change? The victim has no role to play but to sit and wait for something outside of themselves to happen. Can Creator comment on this notion of achieving closure, as something that must be done for the victim, rather than by the victim?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma358 views0 answers0 votesVictimhood is widely equated with powerlessness. We expect victims to be powerless, fragile, distraught, and in need of protection and isolation. This seems counterintuitive if the goal is to empower victims to heal themselves to the greatest extent possible. The thinking seems to be, if we just leave victims alone, somehow their suffering will slowly evaporate and they’ll bounce back when they are ready. Once again, waiting for something to happen to them rather than making something happen themselves. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma354 views0 answers0 votesVictims are often thought of as “damaged goods.” This has been especially true in regard to the crime of rape, to such an extreme that some cultures have even blamed the victims themselves, and had them put to death along with the perpetrator, or even instead of the perpetrator. There is truth to the notion that emotional trauma can be crippling, and transform a once happy and gregarious person into someone almost unrecognizable. Some victims are so conscious of this fact, that they go out of their way to say, “It was no big deal.” What is Creator’s perspective on this dilemma?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma347 views0 answers0 votesIn all these questions we have been exploring the idea of the innocent victim who has no duty, and to whom everything is owed by agents and circumstances outside of themselves, that victims are special, but even so, may be regarded as undesirable damaged goods by some, or even many. In contrast, Creator said this in last week’s radio show: “As the guardian of your own soul, you are responsible even for healing what is done to you by others.” This seems to be quite a departure from the notion of the helpless victim, powerless to remedy their own situation. Can Creator comment further?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma354 views0 answers0 votesCan Creator share how prayer work and the Lightworker Healing Protocol can empower victims to heal themselves and even their perpetrators, and rise above and away from the self-perception of being an innocent and helpless victim?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma505 views0 answers0 votesWe know the saying “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” How wise is it, to pray for daily protection as opposed to another focus? Many hunger for evidence of miracles and divine presence in their lives, and it seems that receiving divine protection from danger provides some of the most profound and satisfying evidence of divine presence in this world of profound disconnection. Does the divine sometimes allow a danger to become dangerously close in order to provide the opportunity to experience a miracle? We know many have been snapped out of complacency and even atheism when rescued from danger, inexplicably. How often does the divine use this opportunity as a teaching tool?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Prayer363 views0 answers0 votesWe cannot recall Creator saying “I don’t know” when it comes to explaining any aspect of reality. The only time we have heard it is in regard to the free will choices that might be made by a being granted free will, where the potential crystalizing of consequences resulting from such choices seems to be knowable, but is always uncertain until it happens—it seems everything else is known. Is this truly the only thing Creator has no genuine knowledge of?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Human Potential301 views0 answers0 votesIs faith provisional, a temporary tool to bridge the gap between complete ignorance and complete knowledge, perhaps otherwise known as enlightenment?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Human Potential312 views0 answers0 votesA viewer writes: “I have some issues: Firstly, though my creativity has been pouring out in comparison to the past wherein I did not feel creative at all, I feel there is still a blockage that is not allowing me to move further, and also a lack of creativity because I feel not good enough and am trivializing it. Secondly, is my inability to learn a language. I am married to an Austrian and have been trying to learn German for a few years now. Despite me making my best efforts to learn the language, somehow it just doesn’t sit within my brain. I have a rebellious attitude towards the language. Lastly, for many years I experienced disharmony with my husband, though our relationship has improved recently and we are making a conscious effort, I am wondering if this has got to do with some past life and hoping it will not reoccur.” How can we help her?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma239 views0 answers0 votesWhen it comes to eternal life, it would appear the problem is not one of quantity but of QUALITY. What is Creator’s outlook?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Human Potential379 views0 answers0 votesCreator said that for every soul created, a matching twin flame is created as well. Does this mean every soul extension has a twin flame as well or only the soul itself? What is the point of creating twin flames at the soul level if soul extensions are excluded from the joys and benefits of having a perfect partner to share their existence with?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Human Light Beings607 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “I’d like to know what my soul purpose is in this lifetime, what does it require of me to do, is there anything in particular? What I’m trying to say is that I feel my soul purpose is on a spiritual path in some way, possibly healing, but I’d like clarification in what it desires or its purpose?” What can we tell her?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Divine Guidance389 views0 answers0 votesIt seems like the very word “wisdom” might be defined as, the ability to trust and distrust ACCURATELY. How does Creator regard that idea?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Higher Self336 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “As a longtime Buddhist practitioner and now a mindfulness teacher myself, I continue to struggle with trying to make sense of some of the core teachings in Buddhism. One of the three “marks of existence” that all Buddhist practices are centered around understanding through increasingly direct and deep insight/realizations on the path to enlightenment is “no self” or “not self” (annata), which includes that there is no such thing as a permanent, unchanging entity or “soul.” It is said that in his quest for enlightenment, the Buddha looked deeply for the “housebuilder,” the one behind the whole thing, this experience of “I, me, myself,” the doer, and he couldn’t find one, and found instead that all phenomena, including the experience of a fixed entity called a self or soul, were simply the result of interdependent causes and conditions coming together temporarily, including even consciousness itself, which arises temporarily to meet with sensory experiences (which includes the 6th sense of mind) and that this consciousness we experience, too, dies with the body. Of course, there is something that experiences rebirth, as Buddhism was very, very clear on that … Since the goal, enlightenment, involves the ONLY permanent death … The cessation of rebirth. One of my primary teachers stated that what gets reborn is not a “soul,” but our “habits.” I am really hoping that Creator can shed some light on these things, since the teachings of the Buddha are what I resonate with the most, and yet I am also an LHP practitioner and do believe in the divine realm and love the idea of having/being an “immortal soul.” The LHP itself I do see as basically a lovingkindness/compassion/sympathetic joy/equanimity (Divine Abodes) practice, and therefore an extension of Buddhist practice. I accept that especially because the teachings of the Buddha were not written down until hundreds of years after his death that they could have become corrupted, and that given the depth of dark manipulation on Earth they most certainly were. However, this teaching, that there is no soul, that there is no self, is basically THE most important teaching in all of Buddhism. The Suttas (sacred ancient Buddhist texts) quote the Buddha as saying, “Nothing whatsoever is to be taken as I, mine, myself. Whoever has understood this has understood all the teachings.” How are we to make sense of this?”ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Religions485 views0 answers0 votes