A whole book on time – what then is time? The answer seems obvious in many ways, as we are very used to measuring and quantifying it, but is it possible that our perception and understanding of time is wrong and not serving us?
Time certainly makes for a captivating topic. Time, like the body we live in, is our constant companion and we can never get away from it for too long.
You might have also noticed that time can at times be like shackles or a curse even, and at other times a blessing, depending on how it ‘behaves’ and how it ‘treats’ us, dependent on whether there is enough of it or not and whether we like doing what we are doing or not.
And thus, is it time that changes or is it our perception of time?
Does it really make sense that time behaves differently, from time to time, from one event to another, from one day to the next?
Or is there something else at play?
Does time have favourites? Does it bless some and curse others?
And thus, as the author respectfully proposes -- is it possible that there is something wrong with our perception and understanding of time?
Serge Benhayon presents the possibility that we indeed have a skewed understanding of time – that it is not a taskmaster or tyrant – but our ally in the process of true evolution. He goes on to present a plethora of revelations and teachings. As he says:
“This book will effectively stop time in its tracks and reset it to
tick away what it is there to tick and to clock.”
~ Serge Benhayon
In the book he also gives away what the resetting means:
“Time is but a gauge we can use to refer to what we want
or not want on our endless elliptical trajectory.”
~ Serge Benhayon
In other words,
“Time does not move but measures what we have done as we move,
or rather, what we have chosen to express whilst we reside on a planet
and in a realm of life that provides the only one movement, it moving us,
in endless circles until we evolve up and out.”
~ Serge Benhayon
Meanwhile we can all attest to the devastating effect that the pressure of time has on our health and wellbeing, we all know how exhausting it is to race against time, trying to beat time – but how can we practically not get caught up in the old paradigm?
Book 10 Time presents the true nature of time – starting with, and as Benhayon details, the fact that time does not move. Yes, you read correctly – time does not move. Our planet moves, we endlessly move as we circle the Sun, but time itself does not move. Time does not rush, it does not run out, it does not favour some over others, it does not get longer or shorter – time does not move.
Book 10 presents that time is indeed timeless, our constant companion and ally on the way back to our origins, the divine state of being we forsook to delve into physical reality on this planet. And not only did we delve into it – after that first aberration away from who we truly are we ended up completely identifying with physical reality as perceived by the human physical eye and our physical senses, and this includes our perception of time.
And thus the misconception we have that time moves and that we are going somewhere. Plus the misconception that we leave the time we call the past behind, never to be seen again and that there is another time, a better or brighter time ahead which we call the future.
But where is this future going to come from on a planet that endlessly circles the Sun? Can the future really be a different or brighter future when we traverse the same point on our trajectory around the Sun – year after year? How can the future be brighter or better when we repeat our behaviours and patterns ad infinitum and, contrary to our better knowing – refuse to change?
Book 10 presents that time does not move and that, unless we stop repeating in the present what hasn’t worked and what does not serve us, whether that be individually or as a one humanity, we keep repeating our past in different guises and with new and more modern stage props. For example: what we used to call slavery is nowadays called human trafficking.
There is much to be revealed about our true nature and the beholding and supporting role of time as we endlessly circle the Sun; and thus, the volume 'Time' is the first title in a three-part dedicated series which will be followed by 'Space' (volume 2) and volume 3 entitled 'all of us'.
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