Sunday, September 5, 2010

Why Start With MAP?

I dedicate these posts to you who can receive all the joy that is in them.  May your wholeness continue to blossom into light, and joy, and life.   Amen.
My first post set the stage for joy.  Joy comes when you stop giving what you don't have and start learning to give in abundance what you do have, because it is who you are. You need an expansion practice because you teach yourself how to be happy as you extend to give more of who you are.   And you need a health practice to balance that expansion -- breathing in after you breathe out.

Help abounds, but you have to ask for it.  Today is a post about what to ask and what not to ask, focused on health practices.  For expansion into real joy, it is helpful to start with a health practice called MAP. 

MAP stands for the Co-Creative White Brotherhood Medical Assistance Program.  At one level, it is a health practice that you do yourself in the privacy of your own room.  It puts your health into your own hands. There is no one to pay, no one to go see, no complicated steps to follow.   The steps are simple and anyone can do them.  You can do them, starting from where you are right now.  Sessions are relatively short (40 minutes) and yet they can have deep and profound effects. MAP is practical.

At another level, MAP trains you in asking for and allowing in the help that surrounds us all the time.  In MAP, you will be asking for the combined support of the supporters of human form and the supporters of human evolution.  The support of human form comes from the world of Nature and of Nature Intelligence.  The support of human evolution comes from the collection of helper souls of all genders, colors, backgrounds, and callings that is often known collectively as the White Brotherhood. Together, these different experts create a healing "room", called a Coning, in which all of that expertise, along with your Higher Self (i.e. your own pattern and timing and identity) can speak with one voice and work with one heart.   MAP is whole.

But what I love most about MAP is how it challenges us to ask for help at all levels by asking us simply to list our symptoms at all levels.  In MAP, the rule of the game is that your individual healing team, your MAP team, will "work on" any area you can bring to them.   The clarity with which you can bring your issue -- by articulating all the symptoms of the issue; by describing what you have noticed about it at the physical, emotional, mental or spiritual levels;  by stating and offering up your fears, suspicions, wishes, fantasies and hopes about what else your issue might be connected to -- all of this is what gives your MAP team "permission to go to work".   This is great training in surrendering your supposed certainty that you know who you are, that you know what you need, and that you know what should be happening right now. Where you cannot "offer up" your issue -- say if you do not mention it at all or if you make only blanket requests that try to handle all issues right away without taking responsibility for any of them -- they will wait.   They wait for you to ask.  They will not override your timing.  They cannot override your free will.  MAP is respectful.

The way to start MAP is to buy the book, read the first 5 chapters, and then set aside some time for your first few sessions.   (It is also helpful to buy a bottle of ETS+ at the same time.) The book recommends that you do MAP sessions on a regular schedule for the first 5 months. I recommend this, too.   It is enough time to learn the program, to work through many of your initial issues, and to determine for yourself if this program is something you want to make part of your normal routine.

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