As we shift our feelings and thoughts to positive from negative, we become aware of the power that we feel inside. We are becoming aware of our soul. The soul is bigger that just our mind. It includes our dreams, our feelings as well as our thoughts.

I don’t think that we can try to attain the awakening of our soul in any other way than by choosing to put ourselves in the presence of the God of our understanding. Many centuries ago, a wonderful monk lived and wrote Practice in the Presence of God.

He taught me, centuries later, that all I had to do was practice presenting myself to my God. I didn’t have to do anything else but put myself in a place where the God of my understanding could communicate with me.

Prayer is when I communicate with my God and meditation is the practice of listening to God. Although I have tried many times to maintain the principles of meditation to my life, I have never been able to do meditation in the recommended ways.

Instead I set aside time several times a day to “check in” with Him. When I present myself to God for His answers, I come in a spirit of peace and quiet. I rarely “hear” anything. Instead I sense directions or guidances from Him. If my direction is God’s will for my life, the going will be easy. If I am trying to force something to happen, I will become stressed about it.

The difficulty is in getting out of God’s way. If I think that I know exactly the direction of God’s guidance, I have learned that it is probably my ego answering me. Another way that I use to understand God’s direction is to not do anything to force the outcome. I do the footwork and leave the outcome to Him. This is especially hard when all that maybe needed is a phone call.

If I don’t receive some kind of guidance, I realize that the answer may not be no, but rather may be later. This letting go releases great energy and feelings of belonging. “Let go and let God.”

How do you know that someone–regardless of age–is spiritual? Certainly not because they say they are. The best evaluation is to see the fruits of the Spirit manifested by them. The fruits of the Spirit are love, joy, peace, kindness, self-control, patience, faithfulness, goodness, longsuffering and gentleness as listed in Galatians 5:22-23.

Wikipedia identifies mindfulness as “the practice whereby a person is intentionally aware of his or her thoughts and actions in the present moment, non-judgmental”. Although my faith is based in Jesus Christ, I am thankful that He has given me the gift of openness to explore and implement practices from other faiths.
In 1976, when I began implementing breathing exercise with meditation practices, I immediately knew that finding my center and focusing on my breath in and breath out enabled calm and peace to flow through my body. Being human, I learned in a moment what has taken a lifetime to implement. Transcendental meditation has been found to decrease heart rate and blood pressure because the mind-body connection prospers when one experiences peace and calm.

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5 Comments to “Using Spirituality for Change”

  1. PeachyKeen says:

    Beautiful commentary on how to know God. I love the way you described looking for inner peace and quiet to hear God’s guidance. I also liked your last sentence about Transcendental Meditation. I learned TM long ago and it has given me a profound sense of Inner Silence. When I access that silent place inside of me it is easier to know what is right and what I should do.

  2. StarGazer says:

    What a nice article on advancing your nearness to God. You mention that meditation is the practice of listening to God. I practice Transcendental Meditation and find that it enhances my nearness to God by expanding the silence within me in a spontaneous way. I never thought of it as listening to God but you are right. After my TM I feel more attuned to the infinite greatness that lies both within and beyond His perfect creation. This feeling enhances my religious beliefs as a Catholic as well by making God more concrete in terms of my own inner experience. Thanks again for a wonderfully insightful article.

  3. richcat1989 says:

    I really enjoyed your article. You have an excellent of incorporating meditation into your life. I have practiced tibetan buddhism meditatiion techniques for awhile and I find that it really helps my life.

  4. shadow says:

    its a thing of man to be willful. as in wanting to follow one’s own head. it takes great awareness and practise to relinquish that control to that of faith and belief. yet once we manage that, the rewards are great…

  5. [...] Using Spirituality for Change [...]

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