Michelle Caplan art |
Postmistress is a very astute and compassionate person. She gets things on a deeper level. As we were discussing this idea of squeezing every bit of the juice from the fruit, she confessed she had sessions with herself with this very purpose--to uncover her plan for her one wild and precious life (Mary Oliver).
Happy for her that she was dreaming and imagining wonderful things, I knew how this tune would end before she sang it. Because it is the same tune that 99% of us sing day in and out. It is, of course, a blues tune--the I ain't got any money so I can't live my dreams blues. Postmistress has the blues.
I well up with profound sadness that so many of us live in lack, dreams unfulfilled. I, too, have the blues. Harder still to swallow is that this is the reality that we have (collectively) chosen to spend time in. Oh, it is very real to us and has been enhanced in its realness by those who prey.
I remarked to Postmistress that surely there is something we can do to change this--to enable our dreams....? "Sure, you can rest on the backs of others" she said (meaning quit your job, go on welfare, etc--not an option she would take). Well no that is not exactly what I had in mind.
Years ago this blog was begun out of a fascination for the You Create Your Own Reality idea I discovered via the Seth books (channeled by Jane Roberts, written down by Robert Butts). Now, many years since, this radical idea has become truth in my world. And even though it is a truth for me I still catch the residue of lack in the nooks and crannies of my psyche.
Teal Swan Frequency painting-Worldly Abundance |
I know within the deepest and lightest part of me that humanity has participated in this Poverty Play (a farce) as a springboard to living in a whole (different) way. We are moving towards the recognition of our wholeness, our inherent power to create and a world we are deeply connected to. But we have to recognize the farce and chose this new world with all of our hearts.
As my packages were posted and the conversation at the Post Office came to an end, Postmistress summed things up with "well we all leave here dead anyway". She was being funny of course--Postmistress is always jovial. I suggested that in actuality we "leave here alive--every one of us". In her lovely way, she chuckled and said, "well I like that idea much better".