What would you change about your life or yourself in particular? Do you want to be happier? In better shape? Be in less pain?
What do you think about making these changes? And, more importantly, how do you make them last so that you do not have to keep putting effort into maintaining the changes in place? That is where the Tools of Healing come in.
The closer you get to the escape hatch into the peace of mind, the ego will start to roar, calling its horn of thunder to fill the mind with upsets. It will try to distract you from the love in your heart and the awareness of who You Truly Are. It may seem that you are going in the opposite direction, but at that exact moment when we can hardly look, talk or write about the upset, we have the best chance of digging out the core beliefs underneath and seeing the false as false.
In moments like this, one needs healing tools that pull these dark and heavy logs from the mind asap. These healing tools help expose and release faulty assumptions, emotions, and limiting thoughts and beliefs in the mind. What has been keeping you imprisoned for years or even lifetimes can now easily be let go off!
1. The first tool is faith. We know that faith is a loaded word nowadays. But the believer uses faith more like Webster does 1. confidence or trust. 2. a belief that is not based on proof. The believer is also okay with faith having a religious or spiritual connotation. We see the believer using faith as a foundation. All else is built upon it. Everything we think we know as facts are seated on a foundation of faith.
2. Acceptance. Fully accept the truth of your present moment. Release yourself into that truth. Let go. It is what it is. Fully admit the truth of your present moment, the raw, naked, unadulterated truth. You shall know your truth, and the truth shall set you free. This is one of the most powerful concepts in healing. If you want to be free of a particular sickness, you must work with the truth of it. Denial, repression, resistance, rationalizations, spins, and fantasies do not work.
3. Compassion. Our inner self constantly guides us to have compassion for whatever it is. We often call understanding “the Alchemist” because it can take this lump of lead in your life and convert it into a nugget of gold. The practice of compassion is often all that is needed to start the change process. It is as if once you open-heartedly accept a part of yourself and stop pushing against it, the love steps in and finishes up what else needs to happen.
4. Followed by forgiveness. When you bring enough compassion to a situation, forgiveness naturally happens. Each case has the amount of understanding needed to trigger forgiveness. But once it is started, it is a genuine letting go: whatever the issue or experience, it is no longer a “button,” there is no emotional rise or charge. You do not have to attempt to repress, deny or ignore painful, angry, or unsupportive thoughts and feelings.
5. Gratitude. Once enough forgiveness happens, the following tool shows itself as a growing sense of gratitude. This world is an incredible place, the Spirit works in unique ways, and the Human Spirit is beautiful and resilient; this gratitude is a recognition of all these things. Again, we can practice gratitude directly or let it grow from a practice of compassion. The latter leads to an appreciation with deep knowledge and conviction, not just a façade supported by effort.
6. Right Action. We live in a world that requires getting up off the couch and doing things once in a while. Such action is called right action in many world traditions. Right action is based upon proper understanding. Our doing comes from being. As we uncover and bring forth more of our true essential selves, our actions stem from that.
Moreover, Reverend Dr. Linda De Coff shares in-depth talks on the Highest Principle and Law, Guided Meditations, The Immortal Principles, and Powers of Divine Love, even in radio shows and book trailers. Her ways of attaining healing take a process that you could also consider as the tools mentioned above are being shared.
