Tuesday, February 16, 2021

On The Destruction of Kindness

 

Sometimes I am surprized to find the most helpful bits of wisdom at expected places and times, and which stick with me, transforming my life forever.


There is one problem which is never far from my mind and which always astonishes me when ever I encounter it. I work through it and arrive at a solution, but have never found any confirmation from outside viewpoints which I might read or hear or see in order to hang on to it better than I do.


That problem is how it is possible that genuine kindness is so often hated. My experience is that people pick up on kindness immediately, sense it quicker than animals, and usually try to destroy it.


So I was very heartened to discover the following magnificent passage from “Voices from The afterlife: A Guide to Healing from The Spirit World, “ 1998, by Lily Fairchilde. She is a psychic medium and these words are spoken to her by an Angel, p. 136:


This need to destroy comes from a wounded heart filled with despair. They have rejected love and contracted into a space of fear so deep and overwhelming that they no longer remember who they really are.  These demonic beings are jealous of and bent upon destroying that which they have forgotten that they themselves have. When they see someone who is filled with innocence and light, who would serve the good of the whole, it then becomes their sole intent to annihilate that goodness. If they can not find an opening within the energy field of a light-filled human, they search out someone close by who possesses certain vulnerabilities. They then manipulate that vulnerable human to create discomfort and pain for the person of light, in the hopes that these challenges will cause them to turn away from their Divine source. They feel that if they can destroy all Love in the universe, then they will no longer be reminded of that which they believe is lost to them forever, and their endless pain will cease.


These are, without any doubt, the deepest, most sincere and most helpful words I have read or heard about the problem.