May 10, 2024
And in the end,
the love you take,
is equal to the love you make.
Paul McCartney
Getting ready to travel through airports, the common counsel sisters share with each other is to shield up. I get it. The energy, especially in US airports, can be tense and irritable at best. For those of us who don’t spend much time in such public places, it can be jarring. However I find a more effective approach is to just turn up my Light.
After my time here in Ireland with TaETay in March and our conversations around the Irish moksha energy, I’ve come to think of this as going all Irish on people. Perhaps better to
think of it as going all moksha on people. Basically shining that sense of oneness on people. And I find that if I hold that shining just a bit longer than expected, they respond and the energy shifts.
The End was the last song recorded by all four Beatles and Paul’s lyrics seem a poignant reflection on their time together. For some they may reinforce a belief that love is somehow transactional, getting and giving love in equal measure. But it’s not. It’s reciprocal and the difference is important. When I shine, when I give love to others, it’s not about expecting love coming back in equal measure. But I do find that when I increase my shining there is an increase in what comes back. And that’s rather the point.
In these tense and tumultuous times we often wonder what we can do. We can make moksha. We can shift the energy around us and in that shifting we call to the Light that we all hold that we may all shine our Light a bit brighter.
Beannacht,
Judith
Thanks Judith, I’ll hold that as I travel toward you.
Judith, I have thoroughly enjoyed your recent posts. I always feel so drawn to you and your group. I am traveling internationally this weekend myself and will adapt your strategy. As you travel, may your path be easy and your light heal those around you.
I, too, am loving your posts as you travel to and in Ireland. When it is so easy to be engulfed in anger and frustration I appreciate the ways you lead with love. When I struggle to do that, I’ll remember to call up my Irish and make moksha. And my hawthorne tree is in full bloom, a totem in my yard and a further reminder of Ireland.
Going all Irish on others appeals, of course, to the Irish in me. Going all moksha somehow sounds more universal. And I agree that love is reciprocal, not transactional. Certainly we can’t love with joy if we’re constantly waiting to get back what we give. (And calculating that.) Have a safe and welcome day.
Beautiful and thank you for this guidance as well as reminder!!👍🏻💕
Thank you! Awesome reminder as I get ready, ‘girding’ myself to head your way! Much love to you.