09-20-2016, 04:29 PM
I think one of the "hints" to the riddle came from this part, for me:
The more we love the unlovable, the more we allow infinity, and the Creator, and Love, to expand. The veil creates the illusion of separation, which makes reality greater than it was before the veil by its very nature, and it points to the answer to the question: Not how do we find love in the moment, but why should we try to find love in the moment? Because it reconciles that which seems to be irreconcilable - it returns the Creator's lost love home - that which has chosen to separate itself.
It's also possible that Q'uo is talking about the Creator in the microcosm, i.e. in that each of us, our infinite selves, incarnated in 3D and then so affecting our totality, become greater each time we choose to love that which rejects our love.
Quote:To love those that seem to you to be unlovable is strangely enough an even greater gift, for when you are able to find in yourself that resonance of love that can reach out to that which does not solicit it, but rather seems on the contrary to reject it, you have inched, however slightly, towards a wholeness of your whole being, towards a realization of your own being as unified, and every such experience of loving the unlovable, every such experience of unifying the un-unified is an experience of the Creator finding Its lost love returning home, returning to its source. And in doing so, you give also the opportunity of that other center of being, that other incarnate individual, an opportunity, perhaps, to experience (once again however slightly), an aspect of itself, himself, herself, not previously accessible. And so love heals many a wound, love bridges many a division. Love offers itself both as a possible activity and as a condition of being which is the very stuff, the very source, the very destiny of the entire Creation.
The more we love the unlovable, the more we allow infinity, and the Creator, and Love, to expand. The veil creates the illusion of separation, which makes reality greater than it was before the veil by its very nature, and it points to the answer to the question: Not how do we find love in the moment, but why should we try to find love in the moment? Because it reconciles that which seems to be irreconcilable - it returns the Creator's lost love home - that which has chosen to separate itself.
It's also possible that Q'uo is talking about the Creator in the microcosm, i.e. in that each of us, our infinite selves, incarnated in 3D and then so affecting our totality, become greater each time we choose to love that which rejects our love.