Finding Balance. Gregg Braden Says We’re Not Bystanders, We’re Part Of What We See

I had a very productive day yesterday.  After I spent the weekend painting furniture, I was ready to get back in the office and I got a lot of work done, even for a Monday. I spent the morning compiling quarterly documents for my tax accountant, and making my way through the emails that had come in over the weekend.  I’ve been spending time visualizing PayPal donations and so I wasn’t surprised that I had a half dozen waiting for me.  In the afternoon, I ran to the post office, the bank and the produce stand for broccoli, onions, carrots, scallions, mushrooms, tomatoes, romaine and lemons.  I like squeezing lemon juice on my vegetables. It used to be butter on everything; now it’s lemon and parsley – evolution!

In the late afternoon, I went outside and did some hand watering, and then I set the sprinklers to run in 3 areas of the yard.  I’d get it set just right in the back yard, then when I’d turn on the east sprinkler, I had to go back and reset the back sprinkler.  Then I’d finally get both of them watering the right way, and I’d turn on the front sprinkler.  Then the back two would be off!  Grrr!

It took me about 15 minutes of running laps between the sprinklers to have them all turned on and all reaching the area I wanted them to reach.  I thought how my own personal energy is like these sprinklers: I’m focusing on one thing just fine and then I add something else into the mix, and my attention gets diluted.  So I work at finding a balance and then I add something else to it.  Like gathering tax documents at the same time I’m uncluttering my file cabinet at the same time I’m creating a friend’s website at the same time I’m sanding and painting furniture.  Yes, I can do it all, but it takes me awhile to find my balance in the doing of it.  Like getting the water pressure just right in all three sprinklers.

Like we know that everything is connected.  What I do here affects what happens there.  If I do something to impact John, Jane is also impacted. This is easy enough to remember, but it’s not always easy finding the balance to do all I want to do, in the waking time I have to do it.

Gregg Braden tells us in Divine Matrix, “It should be clear that it’s impossible for us to be simply bystanders in our world. As conscious observers, we’re part of all that we see. In the realm of quantum possibilities, we appear to be made to participate in our creation. We’re wired to create.   Our quantum link with the cosmos runs so deep that scientists have created a new vocabulary to describe what such connections really mean. It’s called the Butterfly Effect. The bottom line of this phenomenon suggests that a single small change in one part of the world can be the trigger for a huge alteration in another place and time. The quantum net or matrix that connects everything suggests that you and I direct a force within us that works in a realm that’s free from the limits of physics as we know them.

I guess that’s why I try to do so many things at one time: I know I am not bound by time and space, unless I think I am.  I just need to be mindful of where my physical energy gets placed.  I don’t want to let myself run out of steam doing things that could have waited, while neglecting doing what I wanted to get done first.  It just takes a little going back and forth to find the right balance.  I’m finding it.  Little by little.

Raccoon on porch

Raccoon on porch

Speaking of balance, last night I heard the screen door crash and looked out and saw two fat raccoons on the back porch.  When I opened the door, one of them ran right back out, but this guy ran up the screen. He was pretty good at balancing up there until he could get down.

They’ve got good balance because they practice a lot.  I’m taking their cue and beginning to practice more myself.

I’m getting there.

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