Hello everyone! Today we continue to share forgiveness cases and some related miracle ideas.
Background: My daughter likes to go to the park with her classmates to play, and they always carry their cell phones with them. Because usually, the videos or games on their cell phones are the focus of their play and communication.
One afternoon, shortly after my daughter went to the park with her classmates, I received an unfamiliar phone call. When I saw the strange number, I had a strong premonition that my daughter had lost her phone. Sure enough, when I picked up the phone, my daughter’s voice came from the other end: “Dad, I lost my cell phone.” At this point I was slightly anxious, and then I asked my daughter on the phone, where she lost her cell phone, how she lost it and so on. After asking the situation, I told my daughter: “You wait for me in the park, I’ll be there in a while, and we will look for the cell phone together.”
After hanging up the phone, I quickly got dressed and headed out the door. Because I also wanted to get to the park and retrieve my cell phone quickly. After all, no one usually steals cell phones in this day, not to mention that my daughter was using an old cell phone that I had used. On my way to the park, I was in a hurry, but in a moment I realized that I was in a hurry. Because there were so many negative emotions in that rush. First, I was a little angry at my daughter’s carelessness. Secondly, I thought that if I couldn’t find this cell phone, I would have to buy her another one in a few days and spend $300. And that would cause my savings to go down by $300, which is not something I want to go through. So when I think about that, a certain amount of fear and scarcity comes into play. Thirdly, along with the fear and scarcity, my victimhood emotions emerged along with it, because I thought that my daughter was the cause of all this! And so it was that as I was rushing along and alerted to these negative emotions, the practice of forgiveness began in my thinking.
In response to this incident, I am focusing on forgiving what I fear. Because I felt that this fear was the heaviest in my heart and it was the culprit of all my negative emotions. So when I perceived this, in a split second I used dream substitution and perceived that this was just one of my dreams. Then I thought: even if I will spend $300 in a few days, it will only be in a dream. And even if it happens, it’s just a manifestation of some guilt in my subconscious. So I don’t take it seriously and rightly forgive that this dream world and the me whose savings will be reduced by $300 doesn’t exist at all.
Thus, when I used dream substitution as an aid and alternated between thinking and forgiving “this is just a manifestation of my guilt” and “I’m just going to spend $300 in a dream,” the fear and scarcity disappeared from my mind. At that point, my daughter losing her cell phone would be easy for me to forgive. Because since the victim who would have spent $300 wasn’t real, then my daughter’s loss of her cell phone must not have existed either. So there is no need for me to criminalize her any further, and it is only right that I forgive myself for dreaming about this event. So here is only purity and innocence and the Holy Spirit is with me.
As I hurried along and practiced forgiveness, my anxiousness faded. Then I started looking for my cell phone with my daughter when I got to the park. There was a repetition of emotions while I was looking for my cell phone, though, because the more I couldn’t find it, the more my fear would be triggered a little bit. So as I searched for my cell phone at the park but couldn’t find it, I was also practicing the forgiveness aforementioned. Finally, when both my daughter and I decided we had done all we could, we stopped looking. We then went to the telephone office to get a replacement phone card. And I found another old cell phone from home that I had used and gave it to her. Then I also agreed with her that in a few days if she didn’t find this old cell phone useful, then I would buy her another one. After we had taken care of all this, my phone rang again, still an unfamiliar number. I thought to myself, “It’s over, it’s a waste of time, the cell phone must have been picked up by someone. As it turned out, the cell phone was picked up by an old man. Just because my daughter’s phone number lapsed, so the old man can only use his own phone to call me. Eventually, I made an appointment with the grandpa and got the phone back.
This incident wasn’t over though. On the third day after we retrieved the phone, I received another strange call (from my daughter on her classmate’s cell phone), and I wondered if she had lost the phone again. As expected, my daughter’s voice came on the phone again: “Dad, I lost my phone again! This time it was lost in our neighborhood.” This time, when I heard my daughter’s words I instantly laughed because in a split second it occurred to me that the guilt in my subconscious would have to manifest itself into a situation that would make me break the bank. So when that thought came to me I recognized and laughed. Then in that moment I practiced the forgiveness thinking from the other day a few more times. So this time, as I was looking for the cell phone with my kid, I wasn’t in a hurry at all. Because I had forgiven and had no hope. But maybe it was because of this change in my mindset that this time my daughter retrieved her cell phone in a very short time. Her cell phone had fallen in a pile of snow and was on silent, and the case was still white. I thought to myself, you’ve got a good eye for this! Finally, after we found the phone, the inspiration of the Holy Spirit came to me at the same time, and then I asked my daughter, “How do you think we can avoid losing our cell phones?” She replied that she would buy a cell phone satchel! Thus, the incident ended with the purchase of a cell phone satchel. She has never lost a cell phone since.
I have expressed a lot of information in these two cases above. But there are two things I want to express most:
First, fear is often the source emotion of certain life issues. Second, the event to which fear points is nothing more than the manifestation of an old guilt in our subconscious mind, except that this manifestation is only first manifested in our heart when we are afraid, and has not yet been manifested on the level of our reality. As in my case, the fear of losing my money was the focus of my forgiveness for this life issue, and defining this fearful event, which had not yet manifested into reality, as a manifestation of guilt was the key to my being able to forgive this life issue.