Thursday, July 10, 2014

The Art of Deliberate Creating

The art of deliberate creating, then, at least in Field training, is predicated on a full release of any interest in creating a different reality.


Instead, we assume the identity that corresponds to fulfillment and rest consistently in that state, which entails a subtle “uncreating” of any contradictory or even contrary identifications.


We stop tuning in what we don’t want.


This deconstruction, in practice, involves closing our eyes and refraining from conclusions that would count against fulfillment as something already done.


By withdrawing attention from what is not wanted, we establish a receptive neutrality, and become open to the arrival of an imaginal event that represents the fulfillment of whatever we desire.


We simply let that imaginal experience come, then step into the fulfilled point of view.


As we sit quietly with our eyes closed and no beliefs against the desired identity, something subtle and decisive happens: 


Without our realizing it (which is crucial), the old identity slips away, along with desire as an experience of lack. For that moment, the desire is fulfilled.


Through our willingness to receive, we simply change the identity channel, and begin watching a different reality program, then lose ourselves in the watching.


We don’t have to produce and direct this new program; it’s already being broadcast on the infinite inner airwaves. All we have to do is be receptive, and the new reality is tuned in effortlessly.


The importance of this can’t be overstated.


Strategic consciousness methods are failure methods. We do not, in Field practice, try to make anything happen, or change anything.


We simply disengage from what is not wanted, then allow, receive, and rest in the fulfillment that comes.


This gentle, trusting, humble consciousness is a most artful use of attention and its limitless creative power.



~•*



source: field project dot net

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