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Kalinda Rose Stevenson of No Money Limits, invites you to reprint this article in your publication, ezine, or on your website.

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    Collecting Abundance In A Bucket
    Copyright © 2006, Kalinda Rose Stevenson

    "Everything comes to us that belongs to us if we create the 
    capacity to receive it." --- Rabindranath Tagore
    
    
    	I listened to a recording recently of two men having 
    a conversation about the nature of abundance. In their 
    conversation, the dominant metaphor for abundance was water. 
    They said that we are like fish swimming in the ocean, not 
    recognizing that we are immersed in abundance all the time.
    
    	As metaphors go, this is an intriguing insight into the 
    nature of abundance. I have no idea of the consciousness level of 
    a fish, but I imagine that fish don't analyze their surroundings 
    much. They live in water, but have no consciousness that they 
    are swimming in water. And this is the point of the metaphor. 
    We live in an abundant world, but don't see abundance because 
    it is the medium of our lives.
    
    	But there is a missing piece to the metaphor. The 
    missing piece turns scarcity into real abundance in our lives. 
    The missing piece involves a bucket.
    
    	Instead of the thinking of yourself as a fish swimming in
    the ocean, think of yourself in a rainstorm.  Rain is on my mind 
    these days. I am writing this in the middle of a heavy rainstorm. 
    The jet stream from Alaska has dipped down farther south than 
    usual, bringing rain and rain and more rain. The San Francisco 
    Bay Area just broke the record for the number of rainy days in 
    March. So far in April, it has rained every day. Forecasters 
    predict the rain will continue for the next two weeks.
    
    	And so with rain on my mind, I ask:  How is it that 
    you can live in an abundant universe and not increase your own 
    abundance?  The answer is simple. You aren't holding out your 
    bucket.
    
    	If you want to collect rain water, you don't just stand 
    in the stuff. You do something to collect the water. You take 
    along a bucket. You set up a cistern. You use water tanks. You 
    dig reservoirs. Otherwise, the water rolls off you as water 
    rolls off a duck.
    
    "The world is full of abundance and opportunity, but far too many 
    people come to the fountain of life with a sieve instead of a 
    tank car... a teaspoon instead of a steam shovel. They expect 
    little and as a result they get little." --- Ben Sweetland
    
    	And this is what sets apart those who live in abundance 
    and those who live with lack. Those who live in abundance do 
    something to collect the water. They take a bucket with them. 
    They build cisterns, water tanks, and reservoirs. Those who 
    live with lack just stand in the rain and get wet.
    
    "It is more blessed to give than to receive." --- Acts 20:35
    
    
    	In other words, the ones who live in abundance know how 
    to receive. Those who live in lack don't.
    
    	One of the real reasons so many of us struggle with 
    lack in our lives is that we internalized the words, "It is more 
    blessed to give than receive."  This Bible verse, taken out of 
    context, sets up a value judgment: Giving is better than 
    receiving.
    
    
    	I'm not going to do the critical work involved in telling 
    you what the Greek words mean, or putting in these words in their 
    biblical context. Let's just look at the words themselves and 
    ask what is wrong with this kind of universalizing statement.
    
    "If you want greater prosperity in your life, start forming a 
    vacuum to receive it." --- Catherine Ponder
    
    	Consider breathing. You breathe in and you breathe out. 
    Somehow, we all got the idea that it is okay to receive when we 
    breathe. What if you decide that it is better to breathe out 
    than to breathe in? You can't live very long before you realize 
    that breathing is a cycle. If you want to continue to live, you 
    need to receive air into your lungs as much as you need to 
    breathe it out.
    
    	Even the rain itself is a cycle. The rain falls on Earth,
    runs into the creeks and rivers, flows back into the ocean, gets 
    picked up into clouds and falls on Earth again. Breath and rain 
    are part of life's cycles of giving and receiving. But when it 
    comes to Bible verses, this awareness of the cyclical nature of 
    life often gets replaced by categories straight out of Greek 
    philosophy.
    
    	The ancient Greeks, especially Aristotle, divided reality
    into opposing pairs, and then attached value judgments that one 
    element of each pair was better than the other. So "reason is 
    better is than emotion." "Male is more human than female." "A 
    free man is a more moral being than a slave," and on and on.
    
    	Christian theology picked up many of these same 
    value-laden dichotomies, and imposed them on biblical statements 
    and stories. As a result, many Christian people learned to think 
    in dual categories, with value judgments attached. One example 
    is that Christian theology has taken this one verse: "It more 
    blessed to give than to receive," and turned it into a one-sided 
    rule for life.
    
    	From this simplistic notion, many of us learned that 
    giving is better than receiving.  The obvious question is: How 
    can you give what you don't have?  And if you give all you have, 
    how can you give any more?  To give, you have to have something 
    to give. And to have something you have to receive it first.
    
    
    "Asking is the beginning of receiving. Make sure you don't go 
    to the ocean with a teaspoon. At least take a bucket so the kids 
    won't laugh at you." --- Jim Rohn
    
    	Giving and receiving together are part of the cycle 
    called abundance. Abundance is a dance, involving give and 
    take, back and forth, ebb and flow.
    
    	And so, if you are wondering how to create abundance in 
    your life, claim the metaphor of rain as abundance. If you are 
    standing in the rain, hold out your bucket. 
    



    Writer's Resource Box:
    Kalinda Rose Stevenson, Ph.D.
    FREE Ebook "Do You Know The Money-Making 
    Secret In The Monopoly Game?"
    http://www.nomoneylimits.com
    kalinda@nomoneylimits.com




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