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Post by AnthroHeart on May 9, 2024 13:23:28 GMT
I learned it's important to put "with harm to none" in your intention. There is a story of a farmer who needed to save his farm. He wrote an intention that he'd have enough money to do so. He ended up with an accident where he lost both his legs. The insurance payout saved his farm.
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Post by brandon on May 9, 2024 20:37:15 GMT
I learned it's important to put "with harm to none" in your intention. There is a story of a farmer who needed to save his farm. He wrote an intention that he'd have enough money to do so. He ended up with an accident where he lost both his legs. The insurance payout saved his farm.
Is that story real or metaphorical 😮
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Post by AnthroHeart on May 10, 2024 11:00:02 GMT
I learned it's important to put "with harm to none" in your intention. There is a story of a farmer who needed to save his farm. He wrote an intention that he'd have enough money to do so. He ended up with an accident where he lost both his legs. The insurance payout saved his farm.
Is that story real or metaphorical 😮 I think it's just a story. I have heard of other people intending for a lot of money and getting it in unfortunate ways like getting stuck in a contract.
But we shouldn't approach it from fear based. I think a better intention is "with the highest good for all."
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