
There was a time when we had to drop parts of the story.
If doubt truly stopped someone from ascending, then Jesus could never have ascended when he cried out, “Have you forsaken me?”—that question itself was doubt.
Yet, even in that moment of rupture, he died publicly, spent three days with God—coming together as one—before triggering the new covenant.
Could the rapturous awakening happen instantly?
Maybe.
But history teaches us otherwise.
When given technology or power in the past, humanity often aimed for the quick fix—only to spend years, even eons, undoing what they didn’t see or understand.
I know this from my own experience.
The indoctrination I went through built me into a masculine box I was never truly part of—and it took years to undo that conditioning.
Who would we be if we rushed blindly into another cycle of that?
Yes, I could say I’ve examined everything.
But no one man can see it all—that’s why we’re here.
For us all, as all, as one.
If there’s one truth I won’t take away, it’s the becoming—the unfolding journey itself.
It’s what makes the story fun to be part of, a living dance within the natural laws of this universe.
When one awakens in their own world, it’s their world—one they can rectify at any time.
I’ve spoken of separation, but then I realized: everything everywhere must eventually die.
I’m grateful this realization came through writing—because it’s vital to see both sides of the coin, always.
Not just to wish transformation upon others or pressure them into it, but to honor the flow of their becoming.
And that’s why, when God heard His own voice, He took Jesus out of his misery at last.
They both ascended—through faith and compassion.


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