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Search the Loving Each Day Quotes

Here are three ways to search through the history of over 5,000 Loving Each Day quotes by John-Roger and John Morton.

December 14, 2005

"Thank God" is a commitment to the Soul.

John-Roger, DSS

December 13, 2005

Come into the process of understanding and maintain your calm by consciously, directly holding, not letting flights of fancy take you where they will. Come back to this moment, continually, and you'll find that tensions disappear, distractions disappear, and you'll start coming into the calmness of right now.

John-Roger, DSS
Why on earth do you think we're allowed so many mistakes? Because God loves us. Why do you allow your children so many mistakes? You knew they had to make them. Why did you show them how to do it better? Because you knew how to correct their mistakes so they didn't have to do it over and over. If you do that to your children, then would not God do that to us? He does do it to us. We're allowed the choices of mistakes until hell won't have it. And since hell won't have it, heaven will.

John-Roger, DSS

December 11, 2005

God is in the business of miracles, things that are immeasurably good and yet unexplainable.

John Morton, DSS
Choose your attitude. There are many things you cannot choose, such as your parents, race, color, or place of birth. But you can very well choose the attitude with which you deal with them. You can wake up "on the wrong side of the bed" and still not give in to irritability. What is the opportunity? To recognize that, for some reason, you feel out of balance and to still choose to do those things that support you in prosperity, instead of giving in to the thing that can corrupt you.

John-Roger, DSS
The message has always been the same: In God's name you can do no wrong. But make sure it is in God's name, and not in your emotional turmoil or the deceit of your mind. Put God first and foremost.

John-Roger, DSS
When you act out of the false self, there are all sorts of things you feel you must do, and they all take energy from you. When you live out of the true self, you draw on a source of infinite energy. But as soon as you give attention to your true self, your false self is likely to say, "Hey, what about me," and do anything it can to drag you back into the exterior senses. The true self doesn't say, "What about me?" The true self knows we must eventually return to it, so it is patient. It can wait, because it is eternal. The false self may be patient for a while, but it can't wait for long before it has to do something, then something else, and then something else. Living out of the false self, we become fragmented and procrastinate, not finishing what we started. Then we feel frazzled because life isn't going the way we think it should. When we finally look at the mess we've created, we once again rush to judge. But as we've seen, judgment is a serious matter. In judging our experience, we separate ourselves from our own divinity.

John-Roger, DSS
Be more willing to live your life according to your true self and not what's happening outside yourself.

John-Roger, DSS

December 06, 2005

There's not a real difference between what life is about and what love is about. They're synonymous because they have the same meaning. But like other words that have more than one meaning, how we use life and love determines the meaning. When we have our perceptions and our experiences that say life is less than loving, or somehow life is an aberration from what real loving is, that's just a message that says we're not fully aware of what loving life means. To find the meaning of life just find the loving. If you don't find the loving then find the unloving and choose the loving of the unloving. -John Morton

John Morton, DSS
Often, the simplest tools work the best. "I Love This" is one of the most effective practices for coming to a neutral, uplifting place where you can let love lead. Here's how it works: Whatever is going on in your life - whatever events are occurring, whatever thoughts or emotions you are experiencing - whether you like what's happening or not, accept it as what is and say: "I love this." (You can add other words, but the essence remains the same: "I love myself for doing this." "I love myself for thinking this." Or, if you find yourself in a difficult bind, "I love this situation.") If you find yourself responding to someone in an emotionally reactive way, you can say to yourself, "I love myself for the way I responded emotionally." If someone upsets you, you can say, "I love the way that person upset me." If you're stuck in traffic, you can say, "I love being stuck in traffic," or "I love this difficult situation," or simply "I love this." What's surprising about this method is that it works even if you don't feel any love when you say it. All you need to do is repeat the words consciously - in other words, pay attention and be fully present when you say the phrase. Try this practice for yourself. Make a statement of love whenever you can, whatever situation you're in. Observe whether anything changes inside you. Look on this practice as a fun, exploratory adventure.

John-Roger, DSS