Intent of Change
Each petal of a flower is unique, even though it grows from the same seed, the same soil, and the same nutrients as the rest. Just as each flower in a field is distinct, so too are siblings—or even twins—whose petals, leaves, or thorns may appear alike yet remain wholly their own.
What makes them unique? The intent each carries. Even a petal—or a single-celled organism—holds will and desire. Not as overt as human characteristics, but a blueprint, a leaning, a choice-point that may be followed or shifted to varying degrees. This is what allows each to draw from the soil and environment in its own way.
In humans, the brain, mind, and heart can sometimes override the quiet will of the body’s cells. When these components are not in unison, confusion and division may arise between body, mind, and soul. Imagine the body as a continent and the cells as its people: rarely do all move in harmony, but when the majority are aligned, the whole thrives.
Unison can be cultivated—whether in a body, a community, or a nation—through conscious conditioning of the cells, the units, the parts. It begins with intent, with thoughts shaped into action, with the re-gathering of your own inner constituents. Breath and water serve as oars, guiding the flow and conductivity through the body, returning its parts into harmony.
This inner gathering ripples outward. The more individuals who practice in this way—consciously, meditatively, alone and together—the more the collective shifts. From petal to flower, from field to wind, soothing vibrations spread. It is not change that is sought, but soothing. Soothing shifts the overarching vibration, allowing harmony to rise until even the Earth and galaxies exhale, as though releasing a long-held breath.
Seek only to harmonize yourself—your cells, your body, your environment. Change will follow.