The Golden Thread

Never forget it

Midway (Jean Carfantan)
Queen’s Children
2 min readMay 22, 2021

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Image by Myriams-Fotos from Pixabay

In this dimension, we are constantly walking between paradoxes. Our wisdom is cut into life dailies. Sequential time chops up our life into bits. We mix-up fire and water all the time. When you have to be in a survival mode, you need to let the golden thread go, then when times go slower your conscience may reconstitute a coherence with the fragments you are going through.

Our senses are playing a video game with several stages. The way we see and think is determining the stage on which we evolve. It is so versatile and instantaneous that we become progressively trapped into the illusion.

We need to build a continuity on the level we choose to live on. I went through it because I had a tremendous change with my relocation and now I am rebuilding progressively my inner world that had been discontinuous this last month.

We need to keep our will alive and never forget to hold the golden thread.

Posts were woven around this theme, written to remember all this :

  1. Joan Loyce, in Correspondence from the abyss, float among the stars in a poem.
  2. Spirit, in My Story Isn’t Rare, tells us how black men takes power at the expense of black women and how she feels unsafe.
  3. Destiny S. Harris, in The Biggest Cause of Opportunity Loss, explains to us how fear makes us miss opportunities life gives to us.
  4. Beth Stormont, in CHANGE… Needed, or Just for the Sake of Change?, asks the question, did those changes our evolution?
  5. Nalini MacNab, tell us, in A Tale of Three Mystiks, about the three who committed themselves to the great transformation in Her way: the strategist, the seer and the wise.
  6. Beth Stormont, in Lifting the Veil, proposes a poem about changing our point of view as the illusion veil is lifting.
  7. Katrina Bos, in As the Witches Gather, invites us to join the gathering of those who see more than the physical reality around us.
  8. Anthi Psomiadou, in Parallel Walks, takes us into the meanders of her conscience in a poem.
  9. Jean Carfantan, in the prompt Gaia’s Time Slowness, evokes the slow pace of time on this physical plane.
  10. Katrina Bos, in From Fast to Slow to Timeless, shows us how slowness opens the door to timeless in her story.
  11. Marcus, in Tanka at the Speed of Time, writes about how time depends upon our vibration.
  12. Ann Litts, in What Day Is It?, tells us how she took a slower pace as she retired and how she takes an extra-long exhale and hears better what Universe has to tell her than in her busy days.

Blessings to you, fellow writers, to help us building the life we long for.

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Midway (Jean Carfantan)
Queen’s Children

Hypnotherapist, initiator, inspirer, always exploring where my Higher Self leads me to. https://lefildar.gent/en (in English--en, French or Spanish --es)