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Love Rises Above Even the Collective of Emotions Involved

  • Writer: Ronald Everett Maynard
    Ronald Everett Maynard
  • Apr 1
  • 3 min read
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I have thought a lot about how expressiveness relates to me writing an auto-fiction book. Raising Mother Nature: Healing the Human Psyche Through Spiritual Revelations represents my character and outcome as a professional and a person of deeply rooted morals.


Developing my first official book took a decade to come out of me. I wrote so many variations of the manuscript before trusting God enough to complete what became a spiritual devotional. Citing God’s word led me to construct a psychological antidote for healing the human psyche by using philosophical satire to describe my life’s influencers. God won the victory that is my heart.


To be the best version of myself required studying psychology, philosophy, and spirituality to gain insight into human nature. You would likely never guess my profession is in the creative arts. I found that we are subject to being ourselves, and behaviors shared typically cause their share of harmful responses. We have all been there. I needed a better reaction than to combat those people I was supposed to love. The process of learning to get out of my way felt problematic when relationships forced doubt on my brainstem where negativity remained obvious. I needed to love myself enough for forgiveness to work well.


Despite anyone wronging me as a child or as an adult, I gained a powerful reaction after adopting God’s Word into my life. Relationships will always have difficulties because we are usually too similar or on opposite sides of the behavioral spectrum. Looking into the behaviors that caused me to fear relationships with my family told truthful accounts of sinful nature that disrupted our discord. We were never capable of talking through the differences we have always shared. God enabled me to see the importance of loving my family without allowing them to take advantage of my kindness.


I do not need to like someone who I love. The idea sounds preposterous, but such a philosophy benefits my ability to manage such distrust. Therefore, I could gladly give my loved ones a vital organ to save their lives, but I would feel conflicted if their bad decisions disrupted my structured life. My good advice comes from a perspective about offering love without obligation. Love using all your heart, and love consciously as the person who rises above even chaos. Respect yourself, be worthy of its abundance, and cherish what goodness you can offer even your worst enemy.


I suggest giving the shirt off your back is the right choice and never expecting anything in return to reinforce every act of kindness as righteous. I believe love enables enough conviction, favoring some positive cause and effect. If I love moralistically, then my example is a reactive quality shared by the recipient, and we are better together working through our differences, as blood does not necessarily determine a love for a brother or sister. We can all love one another despite who we believe we are. If I aim to invoke a feeling of trust, I must implore your sensibility to know me well enough to care.


Any deceit will further disable a relationship and further separate loved ones. God is love, offering it immensely and unconditionally. He is our source for a proper response. Be loved and do your part. I will know your efforts as a bridge to travel over troubled waters. I love you regardless of who you are, and you can trust that such a commitment benefits us. We must learn how to love without all the other emotions involved that destroy what purpose resolves even the most serious of distrust.


We are human, after all, so let us act like we understand the importance of our existence.

 
 
 

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