View Full Version : Do you think Ted Kennedy was a natural Aber?
LOALola
Sat Aug 29 2009, 10:27pm
I'm watching Teddy Kennedy's funeral on CSPAN. I know of nobody who has overcome tragedy with more positive outlook and expansion than he did. Do you think, in the later years of his life, he was a natural Aber? :rolleyes:
Do you know examples of other public figures who might be good examples?
:heart:
Lola
Chamber
Sun Aug 30 2009, 1:35am
Dead from cancer of the brain...
...definitely an "Aber".
rofl
Make your own magik....monkeys.
LOALola
Sun Aug 30 2009, 1:59am
Chamber,
Right, but he was almost 80. For a Kennedy, he not only had a long life, he knew for a long time when he was going to go. His friends said that was like a gift to him after the way his 3 brothers died suddenly. There's some theory his cancer was caused by his constant cell phone use, which definitely puts out a frequency. (Makes me wonder about my wi-fi, but I digress.)
At that age, you have to go some way. Don't Abers sort of alter their brain routing anyway, come to think of it.
So, what do natural Abers die of, in the fizzy?
:heart:
LOA Lola
Flo
Sun Aug 30 2009, 8:08am
No, I think he was Catholic.
Many, many many paths. :joylick:
It's not about Abe, it's about Source and one's connection to Source. That comes in many different flavors.
I have always preferred chocolate and vanilla twist with sprinkles.
AttractionFactor
Sun Aug 30 2009, 8:51am
No, I think he was Catholic.
Many, many many paths. :joylick:
It's not about Abe, it's about Source and one's connection to Source. That comes in many different flavors.
I have always preferred chocolate and vanilla twist with sprinkles.
Flo, you have a very good point. :) I don't think it's really important to determine whether someone is an Aber, or if someone is even spiritual.
Everyone chooses a path that is appropriate for them, and from Kennedy's perspective, he found value in Catholicism and its tenets. And I think he really gained from them in a way where he helped others, and impacted society in a beneficial way. I find it inspiring that his departure has inspired many across the country to serve others.
I also think there are various ways to choose what is Abraham and what is not. As we all know, people who discuss Abraham on the internet have differing views on what is on topic to Abraham and what is not, such as the clash that can occur between visitors of Abetalk and Abeforum. Yet everyone who chooses to see Abraham from their perspective feels their way is the right way - no one is wrong - just differing points of interpretation. :)
So one could see a natural Aber this way, and another in another way.
I think the best way to make sense of it all is to just focus on your pie, and allow others to choose their life in a way that best suits them, as you live your life that best suit you. And if Kennedy seemed like a natural Aber, in how he lived the life that way he wanted it, by making changes to the political structure of society where he assisted in the passing of laws that would help others move forward in life, I think that would be a natural Abish way to see it (grin).
Great question, LOALola.
Flo
Sun Aug 30 2009, 9:33am
Great point Steve....and yes, we all see things, even abe and abers, thru our own unique lens and it is all good. There is room for all it ....it is a grand, bad ass buffet!
This is one of my favorite quotes from Abraham....
You could have never heard any of this, about Law of Attraction or Science of Deliberate Creation, or Law of Allowing. You could have just had a friend who taught you about appreciation — and you would know everything that you would ever need to know to live the fulfilling experience that you have intended when you came forth into this physical body.Excerpted from the workshop in Tucson, AZ on Saturday, February 2nd, 2002
LOALola
Sun Aug 30 2009, 2:04pm
Thanks, Attraction Factor, when you get past those giant photos you post, you're nothing but content, honey.
Of course, what I mean by "natural Aber" is that a person is not, in fact, one who has studied Abe. They seem to have mastered positive thought and the law of attraction by their own natural processes via some other path; they continuously create or recreate a positive universe around themselves. What church they went to or never went to is irrelevant.
Skibby, so Teddy couldn't have grown after Chappaquiddick? Guess I'm doomed from my past mistakes? Ha. I think that event possibly turned everything around for him. He seemed to entirely change his life from that negative event forward. He kept rebuilding a happy universe for himself and for his extended family following tragedy after tragedy. Pretty amazing, perhaps the most amazing story of a soul resiliance in our time, for a US public figure.
Maybe he wanted to die of brain cancer. It's not the worse way to go. Who knows! He certainly applied maximum energy to get his fizzy, mind and spirit flowing to overcome it all. Eventually, it wears out on the physical plane.
Of course, this isn't a question of politics, it's a question of how this man managed to be happy and emit happiness to so many, especially is family, through extraordinary grief.
Love to you, Teddy.
:heart::heart::heart:
LOA Lola
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