Pain Gives Way To Peace

Photo courtesy of Arthur Bruno

I visited with an old friend who feels as though she’s drowning in sadness. A man she didn’t want to live without died, and she’s having a tough time going forward on her own. I can understand how she feels as she tries to remember how to be happy. The things we spoke of led me to tell her about Mary Haskell, the woman who loved Kahlil Gibran. Although she was much older than him, he died many years before her. At his funeral, her friends were amazed that she was so peacefully happy and they wanted to know how that could be. She told them she felt closer to him than she ever had before. I talked to my friend about our unity in divine Love, and our inseparability as the experience and expression of God. These realizations are not meant to negate sorrow for her. I fervently believe we should honor our grief and give in to it fully. Allow the tears to dilute your sadness, and when you’re ready to embrace infinite Love, you will do so with an open heart. Namaste, my friends…

“Today we see only the loving and the lovable. We see it in appearances of pain, and pain gives way to peace. We see it in the frantic, in the sad and the distressed, the lonely and afraid, who are restored to the tranquility and peace of mind in which they were created. And we see it in the dying and the dead as well, restoring them to life. All this we see because we saw it first within ourselves.”

A Course in Miracles W-124.4:6–5:4


“If grief causes suffering, convince the sufferer that affliction is often the source of joy, and that he should rejoice always in ever-present Love.”

Mary Baker Eddy - Science & Health Page 377:3-6

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