dailydatewithgod

Sharing my experiences and understandings of the Great I AM.

Be Unknown Navigation!

on January 4, 2020
Living and traveling around Los Angeles no matter how well you know the territory having a GPS system to assist with navigation is helpful.  Aside from the general ability to get assistance with how to get from point A to point B, most systems these days will be able to tell you how long it is likely to take.  In Los Angeles, the length of travel time is more essential to navigation than the actual mileage. I am guessing it is the same in other busy traffic cities but it is funny how one’s concept of navigation changes depending on the purpose.  Unless one has no timelines, a way to navigate from point A to point B is necessary.  Yet, how much of the navigation we follow really get us to where we want to go?  What additional kinds of navigation is often given to us but we balk at it because it doesn’t make sense or we think we need to know the exact ending spot? What if the purpose of the navigation is only meant to get us on the road? What if it is about embarking on the trip of life and taking it one mile at a time?  Most GPS systems will adjust as we take turns and not on the set course.  Our hearts function in this navigational fashion.  When we are bound to get frustrated and upset when things are not going according to plan or fear we have veered too far off track, our hearts are there to take us down a notch and make room for adjustments.  Our hearts are the space where the idea of wherever we are in the course of our travels there is something valuable that can be learned.  The navigation of our hearts reminds us as long as we are still on the trip not all is lost.  It is when we allow the purpose or course of navigation as set in our minds to overrule who we are for the sake of reaching a known destination that we have truly gotten lost. Our hearts are the place within ourselves whispering to reconnect and get peak our curiosity by learning something unknown to us about ourselves in the course of travels.

How might we make room for our heart’s version of navigation when we find ourselves lost to ourselves on the path of travel we set upon today?


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