Reflections


“God” is just a collection of opinions about God, called “Theology.” The reality of God is in our imagination. We call that “faith,” but it is like “faith” in an invisible friend. There is nothing there. I can say this because I am a retired minister with 40.5 years of service to the church, and I said this kind of thing from the pulpit. Our work is getting behind all the thinking about God and move from “believing” to “KNOWING,” and we KNOW that which has always been called, “God” by intentonally becoming best friends with Tao, Psyche, Intuition.

We seek ourselves from birth, wanting to know who we are and what we are (to be) about. We are born with the Knower within and look without ceasing for the Knower without. That is the source of all of our problems today. Knowing the Knower within is as simple as dropping into the emptines, stillness, silence (One thing, not three!) and waiting for what meets us there to arise, appear, emerge from the silence, wink at us, and say, “It’s about time.” That is our cue to say, “Tell me what you know.” And that begins the Journey (The Hero’s Journey) that lasts throughout time.


Tao, Psyche, and Intuition come alive in quiet stillness — in awareness, observation, and openness to the here and now. With patience, we discover the confident assurance that we already have what we need to find what we need, and to do what is called for in each situation as it arises.

This begins with taking the time to drop into the emptiness, stillness, and silence — to simply be with what meets us there, without pushing, striving, wanting, insisting, or demanding that our inner world meet our expectations and desires. We do not know what we need. Our place is to receive well what meets us in the silence.

Tao, Psyche, and Intuition are our inner powers — the Force that blends us into what is actually needed in our life, without our imposing it. These powers come alive when we relax into them and trust them to lead us, guide us, direct us softly and gently. We do not impose our will upon our life. We take direction by sensing the flow, saying yes and no to what is what, as we are led — here, now, in the quiet of daily life.