Meditation for Prosperity and the Art of Allowing – Confessions of a Formerly Reluctant Meditator

Meditation for prosperity and abundance? To be honest, that connection had never occurred to me until recently, otherwise I would have started meditating much sooner. For years, people told me that I should meditate. I tried it a couple of times, but it wasn’t my thing. He felt bored. And I couldn’t see the point.

You may also have had exaggerated expectations of how meditating would feel. I guess I thought it would be a lot like hypnosis, which I also had exaggerated expectations for. Neither of my attempts at either technique just didn’t come close to what I expected, which was a state of ecstatic oblivion. So I thought it didn’t work. Either that, or it just didn’t work for me.

Fast forward a few years…

I was listening to an Abraham-Hicks CD when Abraham suddenly spoke of “allowing.” All the prosperity and abundance he could ever want would be mine if he could refrain me from driving them away entirely. I first came across the term “allow” during an advanced Quantum Touch workshop and felt lost. Let? How? What was he supposed to do exactly?

This had been very frustrating because it seemed to be a key part of the process. Since then, she had also found it by reading about the manifestation. And that left me even more frustrated. How am I supposed to manifest prosperity and abundance when I don’t know how to allow it?

So when Abraham brought up the subject of allowing, I sat there prepared to take notes. Maybe he would finally learn what it meant and how to do it. And I did it! Abraham explained that allowing was basically the absence of resistance, something that was not really easy to achieve! Oh! I thought. So it wasn’t just me.

However, what came next really caught my eye:

The most effective way to “allow” was to meditate, Abraham said. Meditate, I thought? No again! But this was different. Meditation according to Abraham basically consisted of being in a relaxed position and not thinking about anything (much). The best part: 10 minutes would be enough. Now what could I do?

I practically ran to my room, lay down, closed my eyes and tried not to think about anything. Well, then that didn’t work very well. But I could think in colors. Just one after another, focusing on imagining myself surrounded by them. Before I knew it, the 10 minutes were up. I did it again the next day and the next, and every day since. Well, almost every day. And the most amazing things began to happen almost immediately.

Just two days later, seemingly out of the blue, I came across an opportunity that ended up helping my cash flow significantly. And just a day after that, I found a flyer where someone was looking for help with a similar project that they wanted to get experience on, but didn’t think I’d ever get the chance because I had no experience. However, I called, and the project was mine, and it worked great.

Now I have to admit that things don’t flow as dramatically every day, but they do go much better on the days I meditate. And when I’ve lazed around for a while, I can really tell the difference.

In fact, it’s been a few days, I can’t imagine how I could get sidetracked like that (it must have been the holidays), and it’s time to get back to my daily practice. So if you’ll excuse me, please. I have to go to bed right now and meditate.

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