Implied Lines

Hold it.
This isn’t what you think it is. I’m not a preacher, or someone who is going to try to make you feel guilty.
Or frightened.
I might annoy you, though. I’m getting ready to tell you the truth about something, and you might not like it.
No, you might not like it one bit.
Before I tell you, I’m going to address a question that’s been asked of me quite often.
Can anyone be a mystic?
The answer is, of course, yes. But, I wouldn’t recommend it. It requires all the faith you can muster, in everything you’ve learned. Then, it requires disposing of everything you’ve learned, and starting over with just your faith.
This is where things get tricky. Very tricky. No matter how much you believe there’s a higher power, there’s a niggling feeling that if you don’t remain in the traditional mindset of how you were raised, there might be repercussions.
Serious repercussions.
You survive the part where your family stands before you wide-eyed and shocked that you’re not one of them anymore. That part is tough, but it can be done.
You also survive the part where you’re asked that seemingly dangerous question in public, and you have to think very hard how to answer it.
But there’s that one thing you still wonder about. The question that used to keep you up at night. The part that frightened you when you were child. The very thing that you faced when you made your first serious life-mistake, that would certainly land you in a place after you die – that no one wants to be.
Hell.
Okay, this is where I might annoy you. If you’re not sitting down, I would recommend doing that now.
As much as this might disappoint you, I thought I’d let you know that it doesn’t exist. So, if you just told your neighbor to go there, it won’t happen. And, more importantly, you won’t go there, either.
Nobody goes there.
I know, it’s a shame. You’ve spent your whole life being good, just to avoid it. But, sorry, it doesn’t exist.
Need proof?
Become a mystic…..
Implied Lines – Lines that have not been drawn, but that the composition of the work makes it appear that they are there.
February 16, 2009 at 1:50 pm
Hi Teresa,
First off, thank you for finding me and including me on your broadcast list. I would just like to throw something out there with respect to “hell”. What if hell isn’t a place we are sent because we are “bad”, or because some higher power judges us as deserving of it, but because we choose to experience it based solely on our own unforgiving self-judgments, and/or our own limiting belief systems? In other words, what if there is a type of existence that happens after we cross over that is similar to life on this plane (where suffering and separation are perpetuated)? I only ask this because I have read several highly credible channeled accounts of ex-mortals who have visited such unpleasant places. I have also “met” a few discarnates myself (during my own mystical experiences) who seemed to reflect the kind of confusion and negativity that I am speaking about. Thus, based on my observations, I would suggest that hell is a construct of the mind, and that there are likely many different varieties.
February 16, 2009 at 1:56 pm
The plane of existence that one experiences if one does not cross over, is what can be remotely considered “hell.” Which, explains your question. If one does not cross over, one is not aware of the correct terminology, nor the wisdom collected by doing so.
The above article is addressing the traditional concept of “hell”, specifically one that is taught to us as children.
But, your opinion is both welcome, and respected.