Every minute of your life you have been operating inside of it- and everything you have ever experienced you have thusly created.
You are a three-fold being. You consist of past, present, and future. Space is likewise divided into three: here, there, and the space between. It is defining and describing this “space between” that becomes difficult, elusive. The moment you begin defining or describing, the space you describe becomes “here” or “there.” Yet we know this “space between” exists. It is what holds “here” and “there” in place-just as the eternal now holds “before and “after” in place.
These three aspects of you are actually three energies. You might call them thought, word, and action. All three put together produce a result-which in your language and understanding is called a feeling, or experience.
Your past is the sum total of every feeling you’ve ever created. Your awareness of some of these is called your memory. When you have a memory, you are said to re-member. That is, to put back together. To reassemble the parts. When you reassemble all of the parts of you, you will have remembered Who You Really Are.
The process of creation starts with thought- an idea, conception, visualization. Everything you say is a thought expressed. It is creative and sends forth creative energy into the universe. Words are more dynamic than thought, because words are a different level of vibration from thought. They alter the universe with greater impact.
Words are the second level of creation.
Next comes action.
Actions are words moving. Words are thoughts expressed. Thoughts are ideas formed. Ideas are energies come together. Energies are forces released. Forces are elements existent. Elements are particles of God, portions of all, the stuff of everything.
The beginning is God. The end is action. Action is God creating-or God experienced.
From M-W:
cre·ate
Pronunciation:
\krē-ˈāt, ˈkrē-ˌ\
Function:
verb
Inflected Form(s):
cre·at·ed; cre·at·ing
Etymology:
Middle English, from Latin creatus, past participle of creare; akin to Latin crescere to grow — more at crescent
Date:
14th century
transitive verb1: to bring into existence
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