DWQA QuestionsCategory: Limiting BeliefsDoes lack of sophistication in thinking represent a healing dilemma or a maturation dilemma? How much is rational and logical thinking a skill that can be enhanced, or a limitation? When we consider someone as gifted musically as Mozart, for instance, we don’t consider ourselves sick because we can’t do a fraction of what he could do. What is needed to be Mozart doesn’t appear to be healing, but PRACTICE and a build-up of skill that spans multiple lifetimes and even dimensions. Countless Lightworker Healing Protocol sessions done for me will not turn me into Mozart, or will it? What can Creator tell us?
Nicola Staff asked 1 year ago
This is an interesting study in contrasts and opportunities. Being open-minded, being flexible, being expansive, being capable of growth and seeing that it happens and is ongoing, are imperatives of the soul. Each soul is a kind of restless body of potential seeking experience, exploration, and an evolving expansion. Most people are living highly constrained lives and never understand there is more they could do or be a part of. One of the constraints and disincentives, seemingly, is that progress is slow and talent will demand an investment through practice to cultivate it, shape it, and optimize its capabilities to bring about ever higher levels of expression, as in the contrast between a young child doing finger painting in kindergarten versus an accomplished mature artist at the peak of their career, it is the first that leads to the second, at least chronologically, and most certainly when looking at the arc of soul expression over multiple lifetimes. It is certainly the case that an inhibition of talent expression can be overcome through using the Lightworker Healing Protocol. But that cannot apply life experience to hone and shape and cultivate musical talent, or other types of talent, which can only happen through life experience. So, in a sense, looking at a problem like a lack of sophistication in thinking as a healing dilemma or a maturation dilemma is comparing apples with oranges, there are two quite distinct and differing constraints in play—it is life experience that allows you to learn how best to express and utilize talent, and that is a consequence of maturation, inevitably, because it cannot be conducted in a brief interval but will take time, and even development of the physical being may be required as an aspect to achieve full expression, as is the case in most endeavors, whether athletic or a musical performance to have a command of an instrument. But it is always the case that with recurring trauma this becomes a disincentive and a growing burden on progress, because it will spawn many self-limiting negative beliefs capable of stunting your growth in any respect, and that is a true healing need that may well be essential in governing whether you ever reach your talent's potential within a lifetime or even multiple lifetimes, and that is because trauma is not left behind when you return to the light following your physical death. The woundings will follow you into subsequent lifetimes and may well rekindle similar self-negativity and self-limitation. Here again is a compelling case for divine partnership, to bring as much healing to bear as one can to undo their karmic liabilities, to become free of impediments that delay your progress and hold you back from being all you are capable of being.