Too long it's been since I've posted. I suppose this is what happens when things pick up. I have manifested what I wanted with one aspect of my life which has led me to manifest with another aspect of my life - the more favorite part.
Why do we always wait to do the most fun stuff for last?
That will be for another post, but that's what has happened. All my life I've wanted to be an artist and now I have finally given myself permission to do that. To devote my life to my art and not only enjoy it, but hopefully empower others and pass it on to others the way it was passed on to me.
So I have been busy with that.
The good thing about realizing your manifestations is that you get to enjoy the benefits and the rewards of your "work" - if you want to cal it work. For me, my work now is like playing, and my time off is like dreaming. Can life really be this fun? Is it even supposed to be that fun?
I grew up thinking that work was work and play was play and play couldn't even be contemplated without work being completed, and completed well. This made me just a little on the too-responsible side of the scale, and there was very little play or if there was it was usually play someone else picked out for me.
I think if I were to give a graduation speech or even a "going to college" speech to a youngster today it would be: Figure out what you love to do and do it! Sounds too simple, but there it is.
Course, figuring out what we want to do can be complicated, and then going after it may involve all sorts of hang-ups, but once those are worked through, Katie bar the door. The fun and the good times do roll!
But while all this hullabaloo has been going on, I've returned back so some original reading I did a while back when I first started on this quest.
This book is short, to the point, and very pragmatic, which I enjoyed immensely. It talks about a subject that is very abstract and hard to describe, and yet the author does so with economical words and thinking. I enjoyed it very much and look forward to re-reading it over and over.
I've put it here for download. It is "The Science of Getting Rich" by Wallace Wattles. What impresses me most about the book is the simple explanation of the author of some of the most amazingly ethereal thoughts and concepts in the book.
Reading it the first time is a real joy, but re-reading it, especially after some time has passed, is equally illuminating.
There's nothing secretive or subversive about owning this book. It's more or less in the public domain and can be downloaded in any number of places on the internet.
It's worth a quick read.
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