01-09-2019, 08:44 AM
Sounds to me like your answers to "what to do if you feel 4D almost all the time" are great ones, and I'm not sure I have more I could add to that.
I will weigh in on meat eating, though, just because I actually relate to that question rather strongly. To be clear, I don't want to state categorically that eating meat is wrong, because I think that determination is best made by each individual on their own. But I will say this much. I stopped eating meat about a year ago, and expressly because of my experiences with feeling energy and what it was doing to me.
I've talked about this on these forums before, so apologies for repeating if you've seen those posts. But sometimes in meditation, particularly when I'm powerfully connected to my higher self, this very potent feeling comes over me that I can only describe as overwhelming. I did a QHHT session at one point and had the interviewer ask my higher self about it. The answer we got was that the reason I was finding the experience somewhat unpleasant was that I was feeling a disharmonious vibration because of my diet, and that if I wanted to lessen the phenomenon, I could give up the eating of meat, and that the death of creatures with a free will to pursue their own survival is not really supposed to be a part of the sustenance of life. The interviewer also asked about things like dairy and eggs, and honey as well. I was told that even giving up dairy and eggs would be wise, since in our society they aren't really freely given. Honey, as it's more or less freely given was more or less okay.
The sense from the message wasn't at all that I HAD to give up meat to progress or anything like that. It was definitely offered as a suggestion and an option for improvement, not a mandate. But I will say that since giving up meat, I CAN definitely tell that my vibration has raised as a result. When I experience that feeling now, it's much more comfortable, and I almost get excited to feel it, since it's a VERY tangible proof to me that all of this spirituality business is REAL, and not in any way just something I'm imagining.
I haven't managed to work dairy and eggs out of my diet yet, since that actually cuts out a LOT more foods from the list of things I can eat. But I'm working towards it, at least as far as the elimination of more overt forms. Cheese will be pretty tough I think, hehe.
But the real reason I wanted to say any of this is to share that actually, and to my surprise, giving up meat itself was not particularly difficult. Now I'm a rather huge fan of salad, and always loved vegetables and beans and things like that, so that definitely helps. I think if one was a picky eater, it might be harder. But on top of that, there are actually some astonishingly delicious meat substitute products on the market these days. I wasn't necessarily missing meat, but there were some burger cookouts earlier this year at my in-laws, and I really don't want to make my mother-in-law go to extra trouble (especially because she's super sweet about it and totally would), so I bring my own stuff to make. There's a product called Beyond Meat that you can find in a lot of grocery stores these days, and I was shocked to find that their burgers are actually really delicious and surprisingly meat-like. They make vegan sausages that are even better. (My recommendation is to stay away from their version of "chicken" though, 'cause it seriously grossed me out.) One of the restaurants nearby also started carrying the Impossible Burger, and it's even more like eating a real burger, if maybe one with a tiny hint of mushroom flavor. (Not unpleasant in a burger anyway, I have to say.) I miss bacon a bit of course, but I was reminded recently that Bacos was the first vegan product sold in the United States, so maybe after not eating bacon for a year, Bacos might actually taste good? Lol, maybe I'll find out.
I will weigh in on meat eating, though, just because I actually relate to that question rather strongly. To be clear, I don't want to state categorically that eating meat is wrong, because I think that determination is best made by each individual on their own. But I will say this much. I stopped eating meat about a year ago, and expressly because of my experiences with feeling energy and what it was doing to me.
I've talked about this on these forums before, so apologies for repeating if you've seen those posts. But sometimes in meditation, particularly when I'm powerfully connected to my higher self, this very potent feeling comes over me that I can only describe as overwhelming. I did a QHHT session at one point and had the interviewer ask my higher self about it. The answer we got was that the reason I was finding the experience somewhat unpleasant was that I was feeling a disharmonious vibration because of my diet, and that if I wanted to lessen the phenomenon, I could give up the eating of meat, and that the death of creatures with a free will to pursue their own survival is not really supposed to be a part of the sustenance of life. The interviewer also asked about things like dairy and eggs, and honey as well. I was told that even giving up dairy and eggs would be wise, since in our society they aren't really freely given. Honey, as it's more or less freely given was more or less okay.
The sense from the message wasn't at all that I HAD to give up meat to progress or anything like that. It was definitely offered as a suggestion and an option for improvement, not a mandate. But I will say that since giving up meat, I CAN definitely tell that my vibration has raised as a result. When I experience that feeling now, it's much more comfortable, and I almost get excited to feel it, since it's a VERY tangible proof to me that all of this spirituality business is REAL, and not in any way just something I'm imagining.
I haven't managed to work dairy and eggs out of my diet yet, since that actually cuts out a LOT more foods from the list of things I can eat. But I'm working towards it, at least as far as the elimination of more overt forms. Cheese will be pretty tough I think, hehe.
But the real reason I wanted to say any of this is to share that actually, and to my surprise, giving up meat itself was not particularly difficult. Now I'm a rather huge fan of salad, and always loved vegetables and beans and things like that, so that definitely helps. I think if one was a picky eater, it might be harder. But on top of that, there are actually some astonishingly delicious meat substitute products on the market these days. I wasn't necessarily missing meat, but there were some burger cookouts earlier this year at my in-laws, and I really don't want to make my mother-in-law go to extra trouble (especially because she's super sweet about it and totally would), so I bring my own stuff to make. There's a product called Beyond Meat that you can find in a lot of grocery stores these days, and I was shocked to find that their burgers are actually really delicious and surprisingly meat-like. They make vegan sausages that are even better. (My recommendation is to stay away from their version of "chicken" though, 'cause it seriously grossed me out.) One of the restaurants nearby also started carrying the Impossible Burger, and it's even more like eating a real burger, if maybe one with a tiny hint of mushroom flavor. (Not unpleasant in a burger anyway, I have to say.) I miss bacon a bit of course, but I was reminded recently that Bacos was the first vegan product sold in the United States, so maybe after not eating bacon for a year, Bacos might actually taste good? Lol, maybe I'll find out.