Are you willing to find the Good in all things?
Are you open to seeking for God in All That Is?
Can you see beyond the judging mind and find the Truth?
Is it possible that you have attached to being right?
We are taught to believe what you see.
We are taught to believe the behavior and not the words.
We are taught to trust our perceptions.
We are taught that there is a singular truth.
Is it possible that we all see through our filters?
Is it possible that our attitude, our beliefs and history distort what we see?
Is it possible that there is no universal truth?
Is it possible that we all are making up our own pictures of “reality”?
We look for what is wrong and we find what is wrong.
We seek to analyze, fix and change what is incorrect.
We believe that our function is to correct others’ wrongs.
We work at trying to figure out and stop others’ mistakes.
Mistaken perceptions, ideas, beliefs, words, behavior all seem to take our time.
Problems that need solutions consume our scientists and researchers.
Humanities errors and sins seem to requires time, energy and money to “fix”.
What is we are increasing and intensifying mistakes in our need to correct them.
We are here to create Goodness, Beauty and Wholeness.
We are creating our experiences with our perceptions and judgments.
We are co-creating our world with our attachment to our function of making “right”.
What if we simply need to trust in the Good, choosing to see things differently?
Could the answers we seek be simply a breath away?
Could it be that with a change of mind, we can see wholeness?
Could it be that when we stop judging, we can see perfection?
Could it be that seeing things differently is a choice we can make?
Seeing goodness is a choice, an attitude, a release of cloudy judgmental filters.
Seeing beauty is a choice, a change of mind to see the natural beauty in all things.
Seeing God and Goddess, Good and Goodness, in All that Is, is merely stepping above the mess.
Do you translate into Good or into Bad, into White or into Black, into Right or Wrong?
Some see the glass half empty and some see it as half full.
Some see it with judgment and fear.
Some see it with curiosity and enjoyment.
Some simply wonder what it tastes like.
If there is nothing to fix, what is there to do.
If there is nothing to complain about, what is there to talk about.
If there is nothing wrong, what can we make right.
If all is well, let us simply enjoy our lives and be happy with one another.
Loving you,
Betty Lue