07-10-2021, 09:17 AM
(07-02-2021, 01:15 PM)Apperception Wrote: Greetings to all and one,
I'm new here and I look forward to contributing as I can.
Since childhood I knew my life purpose was to be a healer. Confusing the terms "healer" and "doctor," I pursued a carrier in medicine. Immense academic difficulty drove me to pursue a spiritual path. Upon discovering The Law of One, I learned the importance of meditation. I began meditating one hour daily followed by reflective writing. This process combined with my osteopathic medical curriculum helped me intuit the flow of energy as explained by Dr. Randolph Stone and other giants in osteopathy.
I am still in medical school because of my great desire to become a licensed doctor of osteopathy as well as a healer. However, being incarnate as a lightworker in medical school has proven extremely difficult. I have failed many exams and needed to repeat an entire year of school. I will continue to direct my will to becoming a licensed doctor and healer. A healer who society recognizes as a doctor has tremendous opportunity to serve, but also great responsibility.
One small grievance that humors me daily is my incompatibility with lightbulbs. In our house they rarely give out completely but choose to flicker out instead.
For all Wanderers who experience grievances great and small, I pray for you daily that we may persevere through sacrifice and service. If any of you can relate stories or advice on being a Wanderer in higher education, I welcome it with joy.
“The service of a lightworker is sometimes a difficult service to offer, as it requires our being incarnate on planet Earth, but it is well worth the sacrifice. Cast your deep mind back, and recapture that feeling you had before incarnation when all was so much clearer. All of us wanderers were eager to come and serve. This is our moment to do so, this brief time of living and being part of Earth. May we serve together with beauty, style, grace and joy.” Carla Rueckert-McCarty
I also found tertiary education interesting but ultimately unsatisfactory. I do believe that you learn valuable skills there, but I have never been able to imbibe human philosophy. I thought I was just not that bright, but now I realise that my perspective is radically different to what most people experience and deduce. The other bain of my tertiary existence was international relations theory. It seems like gobbledy-gook, misses the point and yet I managed to get my degree. 3D life can be a challenge to all involved.