If you contemplate the difference in "knowing the Truth" and "being the Truth" you will see the distinct advantage of this.
Two women were arguing violently in a French Metro Station. A third woman approached and entered into the squabble. One of the first women moved away and took her train. Presently another woman came up and joined in. The second of the first group moved away and took her train leaving the two strange women arguing at blood heat.
"What is that to thee" is pretty good advice after all!
What?
If you are minding your own business you have plenty to mind - mind you!
"Ouch Sir" said the young sergeant who was being decorated by the Colonel before his regiment. The Colonel evidently didn't know how thin the jacket of the Sergeant was and the Sergeant had to be polite - what a terrible situation.
Just like the Metaphysician who is always holding a thought - the longer you hold it the worse the situation gets.
If you want it to work "let it go."
If you want a seed to grow, throw it away.
Your seed must change shape - and it can never accomplish this as long as you hold it - neither can a thought get into manifestation as long as you "hold" it.
"Ouch, Sir," I'm so sorry if it upsets your apple cart of antiquated metaphysics, hope there weren't many apples in it.
2. A.M.
[1] Talbot Mundy (born William Lancaster Gribbon) (1879 –1940) was an English writer. He also wrote under the pseudonym Walter Galt.
Mundy dabbled in various new faiths throughout his life. He had been raised by a strict Anglican family and after running away he abandoned the faith. He spent time in Jerusalem after the First World War as part of a community of Christian Scientists - the area would be the setting for his “Jim Grim” novels he would serialize in Adventure during this time.
In 1922 he met Katherine Tingley, the head of the Theosophical Society, which was based in Point Loma, California (its then head office is the current location of Point Loma Nazarene University). His fiction would incorporate Theosophical ideas while he was there, but he eventually separated from the organization.
Mundy’s novels were about practical, down-to-earth Westerners - British or American - transplanted into the East, who are forced to deal with mystical forces.
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