Saturday, February 5, 2011

The Akashic Records On: Physical Beauty

 

Channeled by Jen Eramith MA on 1 February, 2011


Why do societies and individuals measure beauty according to conventional standards that not everyone fits? How can we move away from societal pressures and find a way for everyone to be proud of their physical features and find self-love just the way they are?  


The key to this question is in your relationship with yourselves.  This is actually the key to everything.  This is the key to Enlightenment and this is the key to being able to access your Akashic Records.   You are being called to revise your relationship with yourselves.  You are being called to reclaim a way of seeing the world that is based on loving yourself rather than looking at yourself from an imagined outside perspective and assessing yourself in externally.

The way that your relationship to physical beauty has evolved, especially in parts of the western world but, really this exists at some level in all of society is based on self-consciousness.  And self-consciousness is something that develops naturally in the course of childhood development.  A natural part of a child's psychological development includes a time when they cannot conceive of another person's perspective.  Children, before they reach the age of self-consciousness, they see the world from their own eyes.  It does not yet occur to them that other people see things differently than they do because it does not fully occur to then that other people are entirely separate from them.

As children grow, evolve and eventually recognize the separation that exists between themselves and others, at least in the human form, then at some point along the way it occurs to a child that other people have a different perspective than they do.  That plants the seed of self-consciousness and what happens after that is at some point along the way, as long as a child is developing in a healthy way, it occurs to the child that other people can see them -- that a person standing in the same room can look at this child and see them in a way that the child had never thought of before.  It occurs to the child that they are being watched.  This is a useful and healthy part of childhood development, but with societal messages that include much criticism, judgment and societal standards for how you should look, how you should act, or how you should feel -- that externalized point of view becomes an incarnation of societal criticism.

As a child considers the point of view of others, she takes all the societal criticism she has encountered and she sees it in the perspective she imagines another person to have.  For instance, if a child has been told that in order to be good she must be quiet, and then when that child develops self-consciousness and realizes another person is watching her, she imagines that other person is judging her according to how quiet she is and therefore how good she is.  It is not inherently true that a good child is a quiet child, and it is not always true that any given person is judging that child.  But, the child takes those messages and puts them together and develops an imagined external perspective.  That imagined external perspective, what she imagines other people see in her, becomes a way by which that child disciplines herself.  All the messages she has encountered that tell her what she should be become a feeling she has that someone is always watching her and judging her.  Therefore, the child starts to feel as if her goodness depends on how others might see and think about her.  This is how you begin to lose your sense of self and get lost in seeking external validation for your beauty and for your own knowing.




As you find yourselves as adults feeling beholden to looking a certain way according to societal standards, you have gotten so lost in that externalized perspective that it is difficult for you to come to that place of inner love.  There are too many leaps to take in order to come back home to yourself that you cannot really find your way.  Be gentle with yourself here.  This externalized perspective, this self-consciousness, is very carefully choreographed by different societies in order to make citizens behave in certain ways.  You are not dealing with a simple thing here, you are dealing with a mechanism that has been in place in societies throughout the world for hundreds, if not thousands, of generations to make you feel bad and behave accordingly.

It is no small feat to come up against this inside your mind and heart, and yet the answer remains relatively simple.  You must begin to see the world from your own eyes and stop imagining how the world sees you.  One step toward doing that is to begin to train your mind to think differently about every situation you walk into.  You might need to start with doing this once a day and eventually you will do it all the time.  The way to start is to plan one event you will be attending – a class, a meeting, lunch with a friend –anything.  Plan one event where you will practice this.  Decide in advance so you can be prepared for it.  When you arrive at that event, before you walk in, decide that every time you wonder how people see you or every time it occurs to you that everyone is looking at you, you are going to take a breath, try to ignore that thought and immediately focus on what you are seeing.  You are going to ask yourself the question, "What do I see now?  What am I noticing now?”  Look around and see everything from your own perspective.  Do not let your mind be occupied by what you imagine others see.  Keep asking yourself, "What do I see?  What is my friend wearing?  What are the colors in the room?  Is it hot or is it cold?  Do people look happy or sad?"  Just keep asking yourself every question you can think of in order to keep looking at the events around you from your own perspective.

This is the way you begin to train your mind, slowly but surely, to not get so lost in the imagined perspective -- the things you imagine other people are seeing or thinking about you.  Once you have mastered this to some degree, then you can start to do it more often throughout the course of your day.  Eventually, as this becomes an easier thing to do, it becomes easier to stay on track with your own perspective.  At that point, it is time to cultivate a genuine joy and celebration for your perspective.  To take the time to take the light in what you see and what you are sensing.  You will begin to get lost in the pleasure of noticing the colors, noticing the smiles on people's faces, noticing the insights you have as you pay more attention to how you see things.  You will have insights into what people are really feeling.  You will start to care more about them because you will be paying more attention to them.  This becomes a celebration of yourself and your unique perspective.
As you relish all the things you see and all the things you notice that the feeling of joy and celebration resonates with the feeling of love.  Eventually you begin to love how you see the world.  You will find that you love going out in the world and exploring it.  That feeling of love eventually occupies you.  This is the experience of self-love.  It is feeling love so consistently that you love yourself and you love everyone around you.

This is a slow process.  You have much to heal and many habit to change.  It takes practice, so take each of these steps and give them several weeks or months.  You must retrain your minds from a very early age to cease the self-consciousness and the inner critic that has reign there.   Instead, become occupied by the joy of noticing everything, of participating in everything and enjoying your own perspective of the world.


Find more at http://www.akashictransformations.com


 

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