Everything is about inclusion. ~All the Lessons of History
Adam Rifkin stashed this in Inclusion
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“When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.” ~ Paulo Coelho
The basis of most physical human confusion, is this:
Everything is about the law of attraction.
Which means, simply, everything is about ‘inclusion.’
I repeat: There is no such thing as ‘exclusion’…
You can’t look at something and say no, no, I want that NOT… and have it go away.
Because your attention to it, causes you to vibrate WITH IT and by law of attraction, it then comes to you…
So when you say YES to something, it comes. When you say NO to something, it comes. There is no such thing as NO in this universe.
Get up. Everything is about inclusion.
And so, your work as a deliberate creator is to sift through the data and define or decipher or DECIDE or choose… those things you are WANTING TO INCLUDE in your experience.
Source: Abraham Hicks, Ask and It Is Given, referred to me via Michelle Thedaker.
The book tells us to make notes and post them where we’ll see them often…
Include vegetables, instead of trying to exclude junk food.
Include the most important thing to do today, instead of trying to exclude procrastination.
And so on.
Be excellent. We are what we repeatedly do. Let everything else go.
All the lessons of history in four sentences, by Charles A. Beard:
Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad with power.
The mills of God grind slowly, but they grind exceedingly small.
The bee fertilizes the flower it robs.
When it is dark enough, you can see the stars.
Quoted by Arthur H. Secord, "Condensed History Lesson", Readers' Digest, Vol. 38, No. 226 (February 1941), p. 20. Secord reports that "Asked if he could summarize the lessons of history in a short book, [Beard] replied that he could do it in [these] four sentences."
The first statement is an ancient anonymous proverb, sometimes wrongly attributed to Euripides. The second is from Friedrich von Logau, "Retribution", Sinngedichte III, 2, 24, c. 1654, as translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The origins of the third and fourth have not been determined.
12:12 AM Oct 07 2013