DWQA QuestionsTag: future lives
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“Karl, I’ve never heard anyone comment on or even say “the spiral staircase” with regards to spiritual matters, yet you mentioned it in the webinar today. I remember a dream I had when I was a child, 5 years old, or so. I was walking up a spiral staircase with other beings ahead of me as well as behind me. This staircase was very strong and stable. It had no handles on either side to hold on to and each step was floating on its own. The staircase was in space. We were all in space. Just space. I remember seeing stars. We were following someone we loved. I intuitively knew I would not fall because my faith would not allow me to entertain such a thought. At the time I had felt the knowing that I could not fall, a suggestion or thought entered my mind: “Look down, look at the stairs, so you don’t fall – you could fall; you might fall.” My heart jumped. I knew not to look. Just entertaining the thought would be a disappointment to God, I thought. Actually looking would have consequences, it felt wrong. I heard the suggestion again “You might fall; you could fall.” The moment fear entered my mind, I fell off the staircase. I fell for what felt a long while and I woke up feeling nervous and disappointed. Was this a portent of things to come? When I grew up and was a young adult, I was lost among some very dark influences, even trying suicide several times. I’ve been through the worst of the worst for sure. I’ve recovered since those dark times and have come back stronger than ever. I know I’ve been noticed. I work very hard at staying in divine alignment. What is the significance of people climbing a spiral staircase somewhere beyond the Earth?” Was this a prophetic dream?
ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • 
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A viewer asks: “This same dynamic of belonging would seem to apply to a lot of entitlement beliefs fostered by other human relationships. For example, two people agree to a business partnership to be shared “50/50.” The rational expectation is that both will be 50% responsible for making the business successful. But the reality is often that one partner will do the lion’s share, and even worse, have to actually compensate for the lack of action or even deleterious actions on the part of the other partner. Succeeding in SPITE of the other partner in fact. Yet, that deadweight partner by mere dint of the original agreement and being part of the enterprise in their head, will feel entitled to HALF, in spite of the fact they contributed nothing or next to nothing to the success of the operation, and may even be a detriment to it. We see this same dynamic often when a parent dies. A friend of mine was forced to liquidate the family sign business even though he ran it with his father for decades, was promised it in fact, but because there was a flaw in the will, the sister got half when he died, and immediately ordered its liquidation. She knew the business was promised to her brother but felt entitled to it nevertheless. Can Creator comment? Where does this unearned-yet-expected entitlement notion, which seems to be a major foundation of the evil mind, have its origin, and how is it best overcome?”
ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • 
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