Be
a Loving Parent to Yourself I
was playing with some neighborhood kids on my new swing that my dad had just made
for me, and as kids will do, we got into a hassle about whose turn it was next.
After a short while, being a double Sagittarian and not very good at being patient,
I announced that it was my swing and so it was my turn. This
elicited a huge outcry from the other kids. As the "discussion" grew
louder and more animated, one of the kids said, in that sing-song voice used during
a taunt, "You're a-a-dopted." The other kids picked it up, and shortly
all of them had joined in his taunting song about me being adopted. At
the time, I was about six years old and had no idea what "adopted" meant,
but their taunting was very clear in its message. There was something really bad
about being adopted. I
ran crying into the house where my mom was folding clothes and told her, between
sobs, about the kids telling me I was adopted and how it was a bad thing. "Oh
no, it's not a bad thing. It's a wonderful thing. What it means is that we chose
you out of all those babies at the hospital," she explained. This
calmed me down and gave me a much better concept of myself. For a short time,
anyway. Not
too long after the taunting incident, I got into trouble at school. One of my
classmates had decided that my lunch looked more appetizing than his and he tried
to grab it away from me. Well, nobody fools with my food! So we began arguing
and were close to physically fighting when the teacher intervened. When
I got home I was greeted by a very angry mother. The teacher had decided it was
in my best interest for her to tattle on me to my mother, but she'd gotten the
story wrong. I wasn't stealing the other kid's lunch. He was trying to steal mine.
However, my mother chose to believe the teacher over me, probably thinking that
I was lying to cover up my attempt at theft. After all, adults and especially
teachers are never wrong. During
the vehement tongue lashing my mother gave me, one of the things she said that
has stuck in my mind to this day was this: "If a person is born of a thief,
they become a thief," she said. 'You were born with bad blood in you,"
she continued, alluding to me being adopted and simultaneously absolving herself
of any guilt regarding raising me to become a lunch thief. For
many years I lived with that belief that I had bad blood in me. It haunted me
and was like a shadow continuously hovering over me, affecting the choices I was
making about my life. Because I believed what my mother told me about having bad
blood in me I made life choices that a person like that would make. Then
one day as I was reading a self-help book, I encountered an inspirational statement
that stopped me in my mentral tracks. It was simply this: I
am a loving, nurturing parent to myself. What
an empowering and powerful message! Suddenly I realized that all that old programming
about having bad blood could be erased! The truth in this new (to me) thought/belief
instantly shifted my thoughts about myself and I began to realize that I could
wipe out the old, negative programming about myself and rewrite it to new programming
of love and kindness toward and about myself. I
found opportunities to apply this new belief to nooks and crannies of my life,
as I began to see myself as a person worthy of love, appreciation, and kindness.
The result was that I no longer allowed others to abuse me in any way. I set boundaries
and hold them. The results were and continue to be amazing! One
of my favorites is finding the man who became my husband. Until I began honoring
myself and my value, and being loving and nurturing to myself, I was attracted
to men who abused me, both mentally and physically. When I began to parent myself
with love and nurturing, I was attracted to a man who treated me with loving kindness.
We've been together now for over 30 years and he is even more loving and kind
as time passes. What
is one thing a loving, nurturing parent might do for you? How
might you do that one loving, nurturing thing for yourself? Love, Kathy
Omnidimensional
Oracles
Universal Knowledge and Practical Wisdom for Human Evolution 
Symbols
are greater than what you currently deem them to be. They are powerful beyond
your current understanding of them. Their power lies in this one concept: Symbols
hold the energy of the structure of your world and how it works. The
symbols contained within the pages of this book hold the foundational energy that
is the basis of all that exists within all worlds. When used with proper intent,
the true purpose and power of these symbols is revealed. They then become oracles
of great knowledge and wisdom. They
bring abstract concepts into our physical world of the Third Dimension and make
them substantial so that we can understand them. Of
all the beings on our planet, in our dimension, only humans have symbols. All
other beings in our here and now have languages by which they communicate using
sound and their physical body. It's only humans who have written or drawn symbols
which we use for communicating our thoughts to each other. These
Omnidimensional Oracle symbols have been created in partnership with the Omnidimensional
Beings and myself to communicate specific energies of conceptual systems of belief
by which we humans operate in our world. The written messages that accompany each
of the symbols describe their energy, their relationship to our Third Dimensional
reality, and how they may be used for the higher purpose of raising frequential
vibration of each person and subsequently, that of the collective of humanity.
More
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