ephemeral
To state the obvious, I’ve been evaluating my life and the world around me lately. One of the lessons I’ve been learning is how insubstantial this thing we call reality really is.
We have the incredible ability to alter our perception of reality any time we want in possibly radical ways, and sometimes, it’s altered for us. For proof, I offer some scenarios for you to consider.
First, I can change my reality drastically whenever I want. I can quit my job, and take another doing something else. I could move out of this house and into another, or an apartment, or move in with a roommate, or rent a hotel room on a weekly basis. The point being, I can go most anywhere I want, whenever I want, and do whatever I want to do. That doesn’t necessarily make it a prudent choice, and my actions can be somewhat limited by others, but in general, I can do what I want.
Sometimes life is altered without your consent. I recently had lunch with some friends of mine, one of whom recently caught her husband coming out of a motel room with another woman. I know she didn’t ask for that to happen, but it did. Her marriage, quite a long one, is now over because of it. Her reality is forever altered because of the actions of another.
Reality is fleeting, made of the insubstantial brought into being by our thoughts. The people, things, and situations in my life are here because I brought them in, or allowed them to stay. But the unseen has an infinite amount of resources available, and if we choose, we can tap into the unseen and by our thoughts cause a new reality to manifest. Want things to improve or change? Think about how you want it to change, communicate that to the unseen, and then act as if it were that way. Sooner or later it will manifest. I’m not talking about altering the basic laws of how the physical world functions, but working with the unseen to bring those people, things, and situations you desire into your life.
The law of attraction. Use it wisely.