[Rita:] Let’s look at reality as it appears from a higher level, a more inclusive level, than the so-called individual.
I have been at some pains to reinforce what the guys told us [in our sessions in 2001-2002], that life is a series of monads in which aggregations of smaller-scale communities function as individuals within larger communities, each of which communities function as individuals at a higher level. By now that concept should be very familiar.
But of course in any model, looking through the opposite end of the microscope or telescope or binoculars, the same reality is going to present itself in very different aspect. What looks like communities of individuals seen one way looks like subdivisions of a great unity, seen another way. So, let’s look at things that other way. And perhaps later we will look at things yet another way, for of course there are always more ways to see anything. It isn’t just looking up or looking down, so to speak.
Start with the idea of everything being part of one complete indivisible thing. I can’t describe All-That-Is, because I am not big enough to encompass it, any more than you are. But we are part of it. It is within us, as we are within it. So, you might say, it can recognize itself. We may not be able to describe or analyze it, but we know it. Some things can’t be said although they are so well known.
Is it like this? We experience the physical world, but how poorly we can describe it. The taste of seaside air, the sound of early morning stillness – well, you get the idea. There is a lot of life that can only be alluded to, and if you haven’t experienced it, you don’t really know it from hearing of it.
That’s a good way to put it. We always know more than we can say, and for that matter we always know more than we know we know.
— From Awakening From the 3D World, available from publisher Rainbow Ridge Books (https://www.rainbowridgebooks.com) or from other booksellers.
Thank you, Frank, for reposting Rita’s work. It’s good to hear it again.