What Kind Of Outlaw Are You Willing To Be?

You consider yourself to be a free-spirited trailblazer, but others will consider you a renegade and a dangerous outlaw if you reject conventional norms or allegiances. You are sincerely forging new paths to provide help for conditions that are not currently being addressed, but you may be challenging traditional beliefs and institutions in the process.


You consider your mission to be vitally important, but in the execution of your mission, you could be flouting established authority and can be considered dangerous to those who are invested in the status quo.

You may be focused on positive things like independence, courage, originality, and challenging unjust authority, but you can be viewed as displaying the illegal or criminal aspects of being an outlaw if you break the written and unwritten agreements of the society you live in.

Conformity and obedience to social agreements are expected of well-regarded citizens. Anything that is done outside these established norms can set off alarms within an established community and can eventually precipitate a violent reaction against those who attempt new activities, however beneficial or necessary.

Introducing spiritual healing into a conventional community is equivalent to bringing cell phones into an Amish community. Both can be considered disrespectful to shared values and threatening enough to require corrective actions by established authority. It doesn’t matter how valuable a technology or activity can be if its introduction violates community beliefs and agreements.

Those of us who communicate with spirits and handle their upsets and the problems they create in our lives and bodies have total certainty of the value of our work. We use many different approaches and produce a variety of results, but the validity of our ability to help is not visible to those with beliefs and agreements that exclude any consideration of remedies beyond those the group has agreed upon.

The only approach that seems to work is to find those points both groups can agree on and expand the areas of agreement by caring communication until both groups can agree on an acceptable level of help. If acceptable help is provided, this can open the door to providing additional help and increased survival for all concerned.

If helping efforts are not recognized and welcomed, they are considered enforced help, and this ends badly for all concerned. Help only those who can be made to recognize its value. Then you will get the recognition you deserve. Otherwise, you may be regarded as a threat and an outlaw to be punished.

This entry was posted in Simpler Lifestyle. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

eighteen + = twenty five

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.