Tag Archives: creating

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“To what extent do you embrace the concept that you create your own reality?” Part Two

Last week I posted Jennifer Hoffman’s article (“Q&A: Why Am I Going Blind?”) and invited reader comments. The response was genuine and heartfelt. Now I’d like to share my experience with trying to understand why something happened to me. “The … Continue reading

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To what extent do you embrace the concept that you create your own reality?

This article appeared in Spirit Library’s email newsletter today and because the author boldly asserts in her response to a woman diagnosed for blindness– that we create everything we experience–I thought it would be fun to see who’s in alignment … Continue reading

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How to Make Those Resolutions Work!

It’s a New Year, a chance to make a difference, a chance to start fresh, and people inspired by holiday bliss make out lists of New Year’s resolutions that frequently add to stress and guilt because they break those resolutions.  … Continue reading

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So…what did “my 2011″ really mean?

In my last post I stated that the accomplishments accrued were not the true meaning of my 2011, my November-to-November experience beginning with, “I’ll do a blog!” So…what was it? The main driver in my adult life has been my … Continue reading

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Co-Creation, Step 2: Focus Your attention

Mike Dooley, author of Leveraging the Universe: 7 Steps to Engaging Life’s Magic emphasizes the importance of consciously focusing one’s attention with thoughts, words, and deeds.  He writes, “What you think, say, and do are your fulcrums for life’s magic: … Continue reading

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Co-Creation, Step 1: What do you want?

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Having a desire or wanting something sounds easy, but the truth is, wanting can be…complicated. Some say they have everything they want; they want nothing. If so, that implies they are 100% satisfied with every aspect of their life including … Continue reading

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Manifesting or Co-Creating: Three Approaches

Most methods for success, especially in manifesting or co-creating include at least three basic elements: desire, attention, and belief.  We are told to formulate a desire, to give it attention with our thoughts, words, and/or actions, and to have belief, … Continue reading

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Conscious creation: getting past negativity

All protocols for co-creation stress “feeling good” no matter what because the universal law, “like attracts like,” means we get more of whatever we’re thinking about and feelings come from thoughts. Generally, feeling better can happen simply by changing your … Continue reading

Conscious Creation: getting what you want

People have been co-creating their experience since we’ve been conscious, but we haven’t always been conscious creators. Fortunately, the more we learn about the process, the more likely we are to create what we want–consciously.

By this time I’m assuming that most folks have at least heard about manifesting, The Law of Attraction, or co-creating–whether in casual conversation, through the movie or book, The Secret, or by way of some other printed or recorded source. We might even have seen that guru manifest a rose on late-night TV way back when. The very thought that we can influence how we experience our life is exciting, provocative or even scary, depending upon our personal beliefs.

While there have been countless speakers and authors on the subject, none has given the whole story and followers of particular methods have given up in frustration. “Tried it; it doesn’t work” is a common response to the mere mention of manifesting. Truth is, manifesting or co-creating is much more complex than presented by those jumping on the bandwagon with books or recordings including “The Law of Attraction” in the title.

Shakti Gawain, one of the most popular spokespersons about methods for using “mental energy and affirmations” to fulfill desires in her book, Creative Visualization (1978), later published a follow-up book, Creating True Prosperity (1997), wherein she addressed some of those complexities. Even so, she writes, “We usually receive exactly the amount of money we need in order to do the things that are truly right for us (p.44).”

In the Seth Workbook, Create Your Own Reality (1984), Nancy Ashley acknowledged the complexity of creating and included nine lessons addressing personal beliefs. Likewise, Sanaya Roman and Duane Parker included sections on beliefs, gratitude, and joy in their book, Creating Money (1988). Certainly Esther Hicks who channels Abraham has made us aware of the importance of our feelings, our magnetic vibrations, in all her books, including Abraham Speaks (1986) Ask & It Is Given (2004), The Law of Attraction (2006), and The Vortex (2009).

And Lawrence Crane, sharing the work of his mentor, Lester Levinson, in The Abundance Course takes the role of emotions a step further in his exercises on attachments and aversions as he teaches us how to release personal obstacles to manifesting our desires.

Some who have failed to manifest will resort to explanations from astrology–almost a “save-face” excuse for their inability to get what they wanted–by saying something like, “Money isn’t in my chart. I was foolish to think I could do something that isn’t in the stars for me. Some of us just weren’t meant to have money.” And then they might become practitioners of astrology-based rituals such as those found in Rochelle Gordon’s The Secret Powers of the Moon (1991) or “new moon wishes” as described in Jan Spiller’s New Moon Astrology (2001).

Or perhaps they go for spells like those listed in Barrie Dolnick’s book, Simple Spells for Success: Ancient practices for creating abundance and prosperity (1996). Or they become devotees of The Lords of the Seven Rays, ascended beings one can call on with prayer and incantations (words) while visualizing (mental imagery) as directed in a book by that title written by Mark Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet (1986) or their more current Creative Abundance (1998) or Manifesting, A Master’s Manual by Khit Harding (1988).

Even Napoleon Hill, the most noted of those earliest writers about manifesting, described in great detail the importance of all those complexities–including ritual and language, beliefs, gratitude, and emotion–in his book, The Law of Success in Sixteen Lessons (1926) which he reportedly wrote on commission for one of the many secret societies that allegedly include most of the American presidents and congressmen!

With so many resources available to teach us about getting what we desire through co-creation or manifesting, then why isn’t everyone hugely successful? I believe it is a combination of factors, including resistance to accepting responsibility for one’s experience–all of it.

And why are so many interested in learning how to do this co-creating, especially now? I believe it’s related to the event we’re all going through now–whether or not we know about it–that concludes on October 28, 2011.

I also believe that the pursuit of co-creation isn’t only about the desire for money or relationships or success in business, but that it is an inherent desire to become the fullest expression of who we are: multidimensional beings. I further believe that each one of us can actualize that fullness though what I’m calling “conscious creation” which takes into account all the complexities previously mentioned–beliefs, words, mental images (visualization), repetitions (ritual), joy (emotion), personal responsibility–and more. How about you?

If you share these beliefs, if you share the desire to become all you can be, then please join me in this series where we’ll explore the process, pitfalls, and personal development required to become co-creators so we can manifest our heart’s desires.

Till next time, I’ll be skating through my resistance and determining what I truly want. How about you? ~Pam

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Weeds? or the Rose? How to experience more joy

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A habit worth developing is “instantly switching attention from whatever feels bad to whatever feels good. Whenever I have negative feelings–disappointed, irritated, frustrated, in short, anything less than joy–it’s because I’m thinking about something I don’t want. Anyone struggling in … Continue reading