Please Forgive a "Radical" Secret?

“What we attack and judge in others is really what we condemn in ourselves.”

That line from Colin Tipping’s book Radical Forgiveness sums up the real key to success in life and work.

Most of us are looking out into the world and blaming what we see for our lack of success. We blame others for what we don’t have.

The thing is, we have to let go of all blame, all attacking, all judging, to free our inner selves to attract what we say we want. Until we do, we are hamsters in a cage chasing our own tails and wondering why we aren’t getting the results we seek.

The way out is to totally forgive everyone involved, including yourself. Tipping calls this “Radical Forgiveness.”

It’s radical because central to this form of forgiveness is the truth that nothing bad ever happened in the first place.

There’s nothing to forgive.

It’s all a divine play.

Central to my forthcoming book with Dr. Hew Len, Zero Limits, is also the idea of forgiveness.

In Tipping’s book, as well as the one by Dr. Hew Len and myself, the idea is that you aren’t asking the Divine to forgive you, but that you forgive yourself for your wrong perceptions so you can directly experience the Divine.

Once you experience forgiveness, your outer world changes.

Again, everything takes place inside you.

If you want more sales; if you want your marketing to work better; if you want better health, or a loving relationship, or a new house, or more money, or anything else, the place to do the work is inside yourself.

And “the work” is forgiveness.

Ao Akua,

Joe
www.mrfire.com

PS – If you want some help in forgiveness, consider the DVD Mark Ryan and I created called Subliminal Manifestation. All you do is slip it into your DVD player and watch it. It does all the work. How much easier can it get?

2 Comments

  1. Kari Larson, Editor & Publisher-Reply
    January 15, 2007 at 11:41 am

    Thanks for the reading suggestion, Joe — and for the timely insights on this Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Just imagine how peace and harmony could manifest if, collectively, citizens and political leaders alike would simply manage to forgive ourselves first…

    Kari Larson
    Editor & Publisher, GoodBiz113 [http://goodbiz113.blogspot.com]

  2. Benoit Emile Michaud-Reply
    January 15, 2007 at 1:10 pm

    I remember when I was part of the student strike in Quebec, I was involved because I believe investing in education is a top priority, but a lot of people were also in this because they blamed others, the government, capitalism, patriarchy, all that the Monty Python fan I am would refer to as “the violence inherent in the system”. I learned a lot about myself then while I observed how others acted and gained an awareness of what is at stake when I blame others.

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