Attitude of Gratitude

Soulful Contemplation on Grace, Gratitude and More

I believe that Gratitude is the key to altering the cellular memory of our DNA and is the juice needed to rewire our energetic bodies so that we become the Masters of our lives and not “hostages” to our “fears”.

We often believe ourselves to be powerless to change our current circumstances; may I suggest something? You are much more powerful than you could possibly imagine. Think about it. Look around, feel into yourself. Everything you are witnessing at this current moment in time you created. Love it or not. This moment is your reality. The energy you resonate to is the frequency that creates your experiences and circumstances.

Perhaps you are thinking…“What do you say about people and children born in poverty and war?” I know I have this conversation with my son who does not believe the things I believe. We respectfully choose to disagree. That is unconditional love.

What I have to say is this?

I believe that our souls choose far before arriving here the lives that we will live and the choices we will have. That we choose the parents based on a frequency match that will create the spark needed to propel us into fulfilling what we have written in our soul’s agreement.

I believe that we choose the time-line, time-frame and location in which we are born into so that we can bring our unique gifts to the world at the most perfect time, at the most perfect place. That every single one of us wherever we are, no matter our station in this life influences each and every experience, that we have a soul agreement with those of whom we have relationships with in each incarnation. Some are recurring while others are not. I believe each soul group has a specific path to follow with choices to make and a responsibility to the other to fulfill.

I believe that those who suffer guide us to our compassionate hearts. Whether or not we choose to open them is up to us.

I believe the root cause of brutality in not sin but the absence of love. For in love brutality would not exist. Perhaps victims of brutality have designed their experiences to be beacons of light to show us the way to our compassionate hearts. Perhaps victims of brutality are offering their family and friends an opportunity to experience forgiveness. Perhaps the abuser is present to offer humanity an opportunity to place no-judgement, to forgive. What I am saying does not imply that an abuser should not be made accountable for their actions. I do believe that for every action there is an appropriate reaction and that appropriate accountability without judgement and forgiveness is necessary to bring balance and order to abusive situations.

Every experience is an opportunity to open our hearts in gratitude and love.