A DETOUR OR A DEAD END?
Location: 
Oregon, US of A
Date: 
Friday, September 2, 2016
Teacher(s): 
Receiver: 

Thought Adjuster:  “You have been pondering why it is so difficult for human beings to admit when they are wrong while such a realization is actually a cause for celebration, as it is for Me, your Inner Guide. 

“Whenever someone gets lost in the fog and strays in the wrong direction, fear, insecurity and anguish become his travel companions.  It may take him a while to realize that he has been wandering in the wrong direction but the continued lack of familiar landmarks will eventually validate his suspicions.  A survival decision has then to be made as to whether turn around and retrace his steps or stubbornly keep marching in the wrong direction. 

“In many cases, pride prevents the small ego from wholeheartedly admitting the errors of its ways.  It is more concerned about saving face and fails to recognize that this actually represents a precious opportunity for soul expansion—an act of divine intervention conducive to a deep conversion experience, a powerful leap of faith in the right direction. 

“Whenever a soul resists close and personal encounters with Truth, it shrivels even more and concocts complex cover ups to save face.  ‘What you resist persists.’ Pride is in the way of evolving in the right direction.  Isn’t it a blessing when your blinders are being removed, enabling you to recognize without the shadow of a doubt that your current belief system is not supportive of your sound evolution?

“Dear ones, whenever you sense that you are not in sync with the intended flow of your life and that you are swimming against its natural current, do not ignore such signals.  Rather, be grateful that you are being made aware that you are investing your energy quota in misguided projects, doomed to hinder or delay your progression. 

“You have been equipped with fine navigational instruments and can tap into precious spiritual Guidance.  If you were lost, wouldn’t you activate your GPS or look up at the starry skies to regain your sense of orientation?  You would then consider your experience as an experiential detour, rather than a dead end.”