The Ten Keys To Total Freedom: A Conversation with Gary M. Douglas & Dr. Dain Heer by Douglas Gary M. & Heer Dr. Dain

The Ten Keys To Total Freedom: A Conversation with Gary M. Douglas & Dr. Dain Heer by Douglas Gary M. & Heer Dr. Dain

Author:Douglas, Gary M. & Heer, Dr. Dain [Douglas, Gary M.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Access Consciousness Publishing Company, LLC
Published: 2012-12-16T06:00:00+00:00


That’s a great process, Gary. You can run that with anything.

Gary: Yep, anything.

You could run: What have you defined as an infinite being that actually isn’t and what have you defined as not an infinite being that actually is?

Gary: Exactly.

Thank you.

Gary: This came up when I was dealing with somebody who was having a wealth issue. I asked her, “What have you defined as wealth?” She said, “Paying my bills.”

I asked, “Wow, that’s wealth?”

She said, “That’s insane, isn’t it?”

I said, “Yes, because if you really want to be wealthy, you have to get more bills.”

Question: I was trying to find signs that tell me when I have moved into judgment, and a couple of things stood out for me. It’s when I say what I feel or think and I hear the words coming out of my head or my mouth.

Gary: Yep, those are two of the major ones.

So I started substituting, “I perceive this information coming to me” and from there, I began to use The Ten Keys and ask questions like, “Would an infinite being act on this?” or “Is this anything I need?” Is that a good technique or am I just leading myself down a path?

Gary: That’s a good technique. That’s the beginning. When we get to some of our other calls, I will give you some other tools you can use to make this easier.

So, “I feel” and “I think” are signs you’ve gone into judgment. Are there any other words you would indicate you’ve gone into judgment?

Gary: Every time I hear somebody say, “I feel that ____,” I notice the energy they’re delivering. When somebody delivers anything with force, that’s judgment, discrimination and discernment.

Some people have the idea that being objective is the way out of being judgmental. They think they’re being objective when they stand outside of something, look at it and come to a conclusion or decision or judgment. They think that being objective proves the choice they make is correct.

It’s not about objectivity. You don’t want to be objective. You don’t want to stand outside of something and look at it. You want to look at things with awareness. You want to observe, not be objective.

To be objective requires you to become something else, stand outside of it and come to a conclusion.

When you are observing, it’s just an interesting point of view. It’s “Wow, that’s an interesting choice” or “Wow, I’m glad I didn’t choose that” or whatever point of view you came up with.

So, when you’re going to make a decision, you use your body to see if you get lighter with your decision?

Gary: You’re not necessarily going to use your body. When you ask, “Which choice feels lighter?” you’re trying to use judgment to come to conclusion. A better question is “Which one of these would I really like to choose?”

Two things occur when you use that question. You start to move out of the me and into the we, because what you’d really like to choose is something that expands you and everybody around you.



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