Thank you to Tiana Nova and Visual Hunt for this image

American author and spiritual teacher, Joe Vitale, tells a story about a hospital in Hawaii for the mentally ill that had a very rapid staff turnover due to the violence of the inmates. Then a new psychologist arrived, a Dr. Ihaleakala Hew Len, who had a unique way of working with the patients.  

Dr Len took the patient files into his office and would study them and then look within himself to see ‘how he had created that person’s illness’. As he generated a feeling of love and acceptance for the patient, he or she improved. 

How is this relevant to our world today?  

Clearly, we have a ‘plague of corruption’, as Judy Mikovits puts it. So many in positions of power are using their authority to cause harm. (The evidence is stacking up quite significantly, now, that the ‘pandemic’ was planned and that the experimental genetic injections, called ‘vaccines’, are quite dangerous.)

But do we judge and condemn the perpetrators or apply a higher principle?

Therapist Dr. Ihaleakala Hew Len apparently cured a complete ward of criminally insane patients­ without ever seeing any of them. What he was allegedly saying in his study is: ‘I’m sorry, I love you.’  

I don’t know if this story is true but my spiritual studies tell me that the principle is sound. The principle is that Love Heals All. There are thousands upon thousands of examples of love healing dis-ease and relationships and situations that are out of balance.  

Dr Len’s apology, to me, is a way of saying, ‘I acknowledge that I am part of the system that resulted in your troubled choice’. We are One.  

It has never made sense that there should be poverty or hunger in the world; it is widely known that hunger is caused by inadequate distribution rather than inadequate supply, and both it and poverty come down to a question of will: certain persons did not want to share, and the rest of us allowed the inequity because we were preoccupied with our own priorities. The examples are almost endless. 

Our acts of omission make us as responsible as those who have perpetrated acts of commission. Today, we are waking up from a period of deep sleep during which we allowed others to control the system.  

Dr Len’s ‘prayer treatment’ was also an example of using ‘the mirror’ to great effect – he was ‘owning’ the inmates’ crimes. As Florence Scovell Shinn says in The Game of Life and How to Play It, ‘Life is a mirror and we find only ourselves reflected in our associates.’ And ‘Love and goodwill destroy the enemies within one’s self, therefore, one has no enemies on the external.’ 

Christ said: “But I say unto you, love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which spitefully use you and persecute you.”  

Goodwill produces a great aura of protection about the one who sends it. Florence Scovell Shinn puts it succinctly: ‘If one blesses a man, he has no power to harm him.’ 

We are faced, today, with the biggest challenge to love. Can we love the perpetrators of evil? 

But firstly, is it evil?  

Are the actions of Fauci and Pfizer etc. evil or are they simply actions that we allowed? Which one of us is more evil? Are we actually ‘partners in crime’?  

The Great Awakening calls for responsibility above all else. Blame is not fitting. Our initial shock and horror as we wake up are appropriate, but then we must ’step up’. 

How that will look depends on who we are:• some of us become activists to wake others up, whether in relation to politics or law or ‘vaccination’ or illness or terrain vs germ theory or environmental pollution such as geo-engineering or so-called climate change; 
• some of us focus on healing the results of the jab; 
• some of us focus on growing food to be less reliant on a cracking system and better able to support local community;
• and some of us will step into the zone of love and begin to express love and gratitude to those who have caused our awakening. 

Will love cause an instant transformation?  

Nope. It took a few months of this daily ‘prayer treatment’ for the changes to occur in that ward for the mentally ill. For those of us who want to see significant changes in our own lives, we must be prepared to ’treat until’ – to hold the vision of love and a perfect outcome for all until we see the result we seek. 

As The Mastery Club motto goes, ‘See the Invisible, Hear the Silent and Do the Impossible.’