Week 2-9: Manifesting My DMP

My DMP has been manifesting nicely. One aspect is my work with feral cats. If you follow my main blog, you know I’ve been working toward catching Zelda to get her spayed. I know Zelda is the mama cat for Sapphire, Nick, and Daisy. I’ve begun to suspect she’s the mama cat for Walter and Junior. Daisy is from her latest litter, which, based upon game camera photos, was born September 30 (Zelda was absent from the camera that day).

I knew I had to get Zelda captured and in to be spayed before she had yet another litter, but we didn’t want to leave any unweaned kittens. Trying to catch her over Thanksgiving weekend wasn’t going to be good, because my veterinarian and staff were closed to enjoy the holiday. That meant Monday, November 28, was the day to begin in earnest attempting to trap Zelda and Nick.

I put the trap on the porch on Sunday to familiarize them with it. Monday morning, I stepped outside with a newspaper and a can of Fancy Feast, Nick and Zelda’s favorite. Nick and Zelda watched me set up and bait the trap. Zelda started eating her way in but backed out. Nick took her place, and (as I expected) he quickly trapped himself. Zelda watched. I covered the trap and headed for the veterinary clinic. They got Nick captured and checked in for his health check, neutering, and vaccinations. I took the trap and returned home. I walked back onto the porch with the trap and the rest of my can of Fancy Feast. Zelda watched me set it up, then she cautiously began eating, then backed out. She worked her way in and backed out. I went back into the house, and no sooner had I stepped into the parlor than I heard the trap trip. I covered it up and took Zelda to the clinic.

I have never had such an easy time trapping cats as I did yesterday, but it happened just as I’d visualized it.

Later in the afternoon, I saw Boomer on the porch. Was this too good to be true? I’ve been trying to catch this cat for two years, and last month he’d inexplicably began letting me pet him while he ate Fancy Feast. I grabbed a carrier and went outside to pet him while he ate, then I gently but firmly scruffed him and tucked him into the carrier. I took him to the clinic. The sad news is Boomer tested positive for feline leukemia and FIV. I expected this, because this poor kitty had been so clearly ill for some time, so I stayed with him while he was put down.

Nick, thankfully, at six months old, passed his FIV test, was neutered earlier in the afternoon, got his vaccinations, and he was ready to come home. The clinic staff put him into the carrier, and we came home. I released Nick to take care of his little sister last night while I await the fate of Zelda today. Nick and Daisy spent last night with each other on their first night without their mama. It’s mid-afternoon, and I’ve not heard from the clinic yet. I’m operating on the “no news is good news” theory that, since I didn’t have a phone call from them, that Zelda passed her FIV test, too. It could be the clinic got really busy today, and she hasn’t been tested yet, so until I get good news, I’m apprehensive.

I have (had) five cats in my colony. Walter has been neutered for three years and is well. Daisy is too young yet, but she seems healthy. I needed to catch Boomer (already suspecting he wouldn’t make it), Zelda, and Nick. That manifested perfectly yesterday. I now know I have a healthy outdoor cat colony. Walter, Nick, and Daisy for sure. I have high hopes for Zelda. I dearly want her to be able to enjoy her “retirement” from having kittens.

Zelda, Daisy, Nick

 

Four is a comfortable size for my immediate neighborhood. There are some down the street who venture to my feeder, and at some point, I may work with the man where these cats live to get them spayed or neutered to stop the explosive growth, but for now, my colony is safe and protected. That had to be my first priority.

Week 2-8 — Opinions

My brother found a book, read it, loved it, had me buy him three copies from Amazon, then he gave me one of those copies. The title? Thoughts to Build On: Thought Power for Successful Living, by M. R. Kopmeyer.

It’s like a mini-Haanel translated for daily living. We’re taught to have no opinions. Chapter Five is a little twist in that. We are to separate fact from fiction and only believe the fact.  

Imagine a past-middle-age man saying to you, “I’ve lost my fortune through unwise investments. It’s too late to start over. My family and I will live out our lives in disgrace and poverty. ”

There’s only one fact in that statement. The rest are opinions. Unless the man believes them all to be facts and lives his life as if they are. Then, they become facts. 

Can you see where this is going? We need to have a clear understanding of what’s fact and what’s opinion in our thinking about our lives.

This is a game changer. Whether we like the Buckeyes or the Wolverines means nothing on the have no opinions scale. Whether we believe we’re all washed up or not in our inner self-talk is what really matters. 

Eradicate the opinions. Focus on the facts. Make sure you teach yourself which is which. 

Week 2-7 – Forgiveness

I’m thankful I was able to catch the webbie live this week. We’ve been traveling non-stop since the end of September. I love the forgiveness week. I learned long ago to let things go. I had had a couple of personal things that I started to hold a grudge about, but I realized the thing I was upset about was not any of my business, and if I didn’t let it go, it would negatively impact my relationship with people I cared deeply about. I wish I could describe how to do it, but, frankly, it was a decision. Once I decided, the issue was just gone.  That simple.

Big stuff has been easy for me. Once I recognize it, I can let it go. The little things have been more insidious. When I find myself constantly annoyed by someone or something, there’s probably something I need to be letting go. Identifying that, letting go, and moving forward can be challenging. I’m getting better at it.

I forgive everyone. Easy to say. Easy to do. But learning to recognize the signs that something is disrupting my life flow is important to dislodging it and letting it float away, never to bother me again. I’ve started to recognize when I need to look for something to let go.

Similarly, I had serious issues with the last two stanzas of the Gal in the Glass. I was annoyed by the second to last stanza, and I kept thinking of Joe Paterno for the last stanza. Finally, sometime over the summer, I realized I wasn’t troubled by them anymore. Now I read them, and keep going. This is the first item we need to read daily for this experience that I can recite from memory. I have a long way to go on the Blueprint Builder, but I’ll get that one, too.

Week 2-6 – Love in My Heart

My ex-husband once called me a “cold-hearted…” you know the end of the phrase. While I have struggled with Scroll Two, I have learned much from it. My heart is very warm when it comes to cats and animals. In the past, my heart has been cooler toward humans; however, Blueprint Builder Paragraph 5 tells me every morning that this will not work. 

My mastermind partner gave me several tips to incorporate into my morning routine to teach myself to do this more effectively. This year, I’m searching this Scroll for more ways to be more genuine in this respect. I have a friend from high school who personifies this Scroll. I’d like to emulate her. 

I have five decades of not doing this the way I should. I will improve, but this one has many bad habits — some of which I don’t even recognize yet! As I identify these bad habits, I will indentify a corresponding good habit to replace it with. 

Scroll One taught me many things this year, and good habits are more than just reading scrolls three times a day. That’s just one habit,  which can be used to establish other good habits. 

Have you heard of Fitbit Challenges? Fitbit has mapped places around the country, and as I start the challenge and walk my normal steps, Fitbit overlays my steps onto the map, and I complete the challenge. I’m walking the NYC Marathon this week. It seems as if using the scrolls to establish new, good habits is kind of like this. 

Week 2-5 – First Virtual Council Member

I’m interviewing candidates for my Virtual Council. Most of the candidates are no longer living (or I do not know them personally or have easy access to them), so I’m “interviewing” them via biographies or autobiographies. I want members to support the scrolls and the Master Keys. Readers should not be too surprised to discover my first candidate is Og Mandino. If you’re in your first year of the course, you’ll be learning Mr. Mandino’s surprising history soon. If you’ve been around the MKE Experience longer, you already know. For the interview, I chose Og Mandino’s A Better Way to Live. In this book, Mr. Mandino offers a brief history of his struggles before he achieved success and also includes 17 principles to live by (don’t worry, you aren’t missing anything — the essence of these principles has already been incorporated into the Master Key course; however, I found the commentary accompanying each principle complementary to what we’re learning. I’m jotting each of these principles onto my index cards and adding them to my stacks.

Mr. Mandino is, most definitely, on my Virtual Council.

Week 2-4 – Today

TODAY I begin a new life.

TODAY I shed my old skin which hath, too long, suffered the bruises of failure and the wounds of mediocrity.

TODAY I am born anew and my birthplace is a vineyard where there is fruit for all.

TODAY I pluck grapes of wisdom from the tallest and fullest vines in the vineyard, for these were planted by the wisest of my profession who have come before me, generation upon generation.

TODAY I savor the taste of grapes from these vines and verily I swallow the seed of success buried in each and new life sprouts within me.

TODAY I begin a new life.

TODAY my old skin has become as dust. I walk tall among men and they know me not, for today I am a new woman, with a new life.

This year, I noticed the emphasis upon TODAY in Scroll 1. This is not coincidental. I’m learning to focus on this day (that the Lord has made).

TODAY, I remember I can attach any feeling I desire to any thought. TODAY, I remember I can instantly replace a negative thought with a positive one. TODAY, I practice these laws and perform amazingly because of practice, because TODAY (and every day) my subconscious works 24-7 to manifest what I plant along with my DMP.

I owe it to my Subby (and, subsequently, myself) to incorporate these laws more fully into my daily life.

Why do I cling to bad feelings? In certain areas, I’m annoyingly stubborn, that’s why. For some reason, there are things in my life I don’t like that I’m unwilling to do what it would take to eliminate them. Some of these things many people would consider highly desirable, yet, because I don’t like them, I resist letting my resentment go to begin choosing to think a positive thought and attach positive feelings. Why? Why do I think it important that I cling to not wanting to do something that is generally so desirable? This is pure craziness. I haven’t wanted to do it in the past. I’ve agreed it’s important for me to do it now. I’ve accepted that on one level, but I’m resisting it on another level. Maybe I feel less valued in some way or taken for granted because I’ve chosen to do it, but in reality, I’m not valued more or less for making this choice. It is what it is. I have no reason to expect it to get better (but maybe I should, because if I apply those laws, maybe it will).

To quit the “vaguebooking, ” I’ll provide a little detail. In the past, I’ve resisted my husband’s annual vacation. I didn’t like the trip. I didn’t want to go, yet my driving contributed to my husband’s safety. If I didn’t go, he’d be driving a rental car around PA with one eye on a laptop GPS and the other on the road (I know this, because before I retired, this was what he would do when I couldn’t get off work to accompany him on this trip). A few years ago, I decided me driving was my gift to him, yet I resented the gift. Not much of a gift if the giver is grouchy about it and gives with a grudging attitude, is it? I did better this year, but when I am honest with myself, I have a long way to go mentally. Too often, I found myself reverting to thinking thoughts that would result in me being grumpy and a less than pleasant companion for my husband.

It’s not too early to begin building good habits for next year. Time to renew my effort with the mental diet and focus on the laws I’ve not been practicing enough. Grapes are on sale this week, too. I better stock up.

 

 

Week 3 – The Olive Tree

Last year, I focused on the onion plant in Scroll 1. You know the line: “An onion plant is old in nine weeks. I have lived as an onion plant. It has not pleased me.”

You laughed, right? A year later, I still chuckle when I read this. But this year, I realized something else. Remember the Law of Growth? What I think about grows. What I forget atrophies. 

Maybe I should spend my time focusing on the olive tree. “To create an olive, one hundred years is required.” What does this mean? We’re working for the long haul. 

This process takes more than nine weeks. For anyone looking for a quick fix in your life, remember this. These tools and processes we’re learning are for a lifetime. 

Week 2-2a – The Watchman at the Gate

This subject is too important not to explore more. Paragraph 15 says, “Conscious mind is reasoning will. Subconscious mind is instinctive desire, the result of past reasoning will.”

To me, this means what is attributed to “instinct” is learned behavior. If this is true, if our learned behavior is harmful to ourselves or others, we can, using the tools of this course, re-learn new and healthier instinctive behaviors. 

From my experience with a few of the things I’m working on in this course, this may not manifest overnight, but with persistent application of the tools and principles we’re learning, we will manifest the desired changes. 

Paragraph 16 offers further guidance. “The subconscious mind draws just and accurate inferences from premises furnished from outside sources. Where the premise is true, the subconscious mind reaches a faultless conclusion, but, where the premise or suggestion is an error, the whole structure falls. The subconscious mind does not engage in the process of proving. It relies upon the conscious mind, “the watchman at the gate,” to guard it from mistaken impressions.”

This should remind us that our desires must comply with the laws of nature if we want to manifest in a healthy way.

So, in addition to employing repetition for our definite major purpose to manifest “effortlessly,” we must ensure what we are manifesting aligns with the laws of nature. (Paragraph 5 of the Blueprint Builder will help with this.)

Much to contemplate in my sits as I learn to keep Subby manifesting what I want and need. 

Week 2-2 – The World Within

Revisting Haanel, and my thoughts this week focus on week 1, week 2, and The World Within. From week 1, I return to paragraph 35: A majority of mankind lives in the world without; few have found the world within, and yet it is the world within that makes the world without; it is therefore creative and everything which you find in your world without has been created by you in the world within. 

For the parts of my life I don’t like, I was a little miffed to learn this last year; however, I can’t argue with the results. As my world within has gradually changed, I’ve seen the changes manifested in the world without. 

This makes it even easier to see what week 2, paragraph 5 means even more clearly as it applies to putting the principles we’re learning into practice. Paragraph 5 refers to playing a difficult piece on a piano and carrying on a vigorous conversation. While I can see how that might happen for someone–not me for a long, long time–the example that I could apply was learning to ride a bike. You can’t do it under the tutelage of your conscious mind. Sure, whoever was teaching you to ride the bike could tell you what to do, but most of us couldn’t just do it. We had to practice and fall down a few times. Until our subconscious mind learned what we were telling it to do and put all the pieces together and began executing effortlessly, we fell over and skinned our knees. 

I’ve had two knee replacements in the last year. I had to relearn a few things my arthritic knees had, over time, forced me to do wrong. My subconscious is relearning to stand straight, to do stairs “normally”, and how to use my hamstrings and other muscles to stand up from a low seat. I used to do those things effortlessly, then my painful knees forced my Subby to find other ways to keep my body moving. Now, with a little practice, these tasks are becoming effortless again. 

That’s a physical example of the mental changes I’m undergoing in the Master Keys program. As I enter my second year with the training wheels freshly off, I’m still practicing to make it “effortless.”  I’m far from a pro, but I’ve come so far from the beginning.