Who I am

Who am I? Am I who you say or who I say? Labels are sometimes misleading, but they are our attempt to quantify and qualify, to provide some kind of order in this chaos of manifest abundance.    

I am sharing the experience I have with being able to influence the electrical energy around me – such as nightlights – not because I am the only one who has this ability or influence; rather, I appear to be one who is not afraid to talk about it. And this ability makes me hard to label or to categorize, although that doesn’t prevent the labels from piling up. 

There is no explanation for the activity. It started and I followed the path. The activity did not stop. It actually became stronger as I worked on upgrading my ability to connect and focus my intuitive senses. I now view the electrical side show as normal for me – and as an affirmation that we are energetic beings. To me, the ongoing phenomena serves to offer tangible support for believing that much more of us exists than is contained in our physical package, and whatever that is, is beyond our ability to “See.”

I am slowly connecting with like minded others who are also exploring these unique anomalous abilities we seem to possess.  Explanation or no, my awareness expanded as a result of an inexplicable encounter with a blinking nightlight. It got my attention… I am glad it was a gentle wake up call…

And no matter what anyone else thinks or says – I am who I am. It is always up to me to be myself – regardless of whatever the outward judgment or label might suggest. And – as with everyone else here – we may not be what we appear to be. The only way to find out more – is to “know” less. 

 Excerpt from the Book – Talking to Nightlights – 

The most wonderful thing I have found is that the journey of self-discovery is timeless. We have done it before and we will do it again—not until we get it right, but as long as there is something new to discover.  The process of becoming awakened to our inner light takes place in a dream, and we alone can determine at what point we want to wake up. A quantum universe supplies us with endless clues in bits and pieces that reveal nothing of the whole. It is large beyond comprehension and, in comparison, we are beyond small.

Given that daunting scenario, conceptualizing what is beyond us is not an entirely impossible undertaking. We can build a bridge to understanding through awareness and, in so doing, create a wonderful entry point for life’s great challenge: discovering the source of our existence or, as some might call it, the Divine One.  

For those of us who are not saints, connection with our inner light or spirit essence is discovered only after we trip over it. Yet, when we stop long enough to examine what tripped us, we may actually find the fall to be self induced. Somewhere, an alarm sounded, and the soul—our link to the Divine One—is calling us home. It is then that the journey of awakening begins.  

What tripped me? A nightlight. And, as with all journalists in pursuit of a good story, I took notes.  

5 thoughts on “Who I am

  1. Checked it out! Perfect timing. Since I have been on this journey…and as a child…I have always had an inner saying..”I am wendy – free to fly!” It helps make the world a lighter place. Thank you Sue Ann.

    Like

  2. We all know who we are, just a matter of whether we intuit it or recognize it.

    What a daunting task to speak out on what is not otherwise the norm.

    You are who you are indeed, not anyone else’s version let alone their shield of words.

    We live in a society where to not have an answer is not a good thing:

    A child walking into a room with a disgruntled parent pointing to crayon on the wall: “Who did this?!” Quick, quick, thinks the child, better have an answer.

    This continues in our schooling where there can only be a set of right answers and to not have the answers, is to fail, regardless of whether years later we discover the first set of answers were wrong to begin with…

    So, yes, it can be threatening for people to “not know”, easier to reject, label or scorn.

    Like

  3. Hello and thank you for your comments. I have found – no matter what the answer – even my answer – it is relative to what we know or think we know at that time. Some answers are more comforting than others.

    Like

Leave a comment

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