Posts Tagged ‘unconditional love’
For the Unconditional Love of Money – Part 2
Continued from yesterday… By Tracy Graham
By doing all of this I was able to viscerally experience the
aspects of money that were good feeling. I began to see that
focusing on the positive, good feeling side of the subject of
money is just as valid as focusing on the heavy, lack side of it.
We have a choice as to which aspects of money we give our
focus over to and the aspects that we choose are the ones
that will be drawn into our experience.
Unconditional love is being non resistant to what is. Jesus was
a teacher who spoke of loving your enemies. Debt, for example,
is perceived by many as the enemy, and don’t we usually try to
resist our enemies? But to be in a state of unconditional love
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For the Unconditional Love of Money – Part 1
By Tracy Graham
For the (Unconditional) Love of Money
There is nothing more spiritual than the free flow of Resource
running through our lives and that resource, naturally,
includes money. Most of us, however, tend to build barriers
that hinder that flow from moving freely and continuously
throughout our experience. To remove any barriers and allow
for the flow of abundance, create an inner environment that is
in harmony with that abundance, one that is free of resistance,
an environment of unconditional love.
Unconditional love is allowing things the freedom to be as they
are with no pushing against, no trying to trying to fix, no trying
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Love for Sale!
So what’s wrong with conditional
love anyway? We see it everywhere
we look, so what could be wrong with it?
Imagine… that every time you pay
me fifty dollars, I tell you I love you.
We could do that all day, but at the end
of the day, would you feel loved?
No, because you’d know that I “loved” you only because you paid me.
Truth is, we simply can’t feel fulfilled by love we “pay for.”
We can feel loved only when it is freely, unconditionally given.
The instant we do anything at all to win the approval, acceptance or
respect of other people – with what we say, what we do, how we
look, etc. – we are paying for the attention and affection
we receive, and we can’t feel genuinely loved.






