
Rob: So, I’m just getting settled and trying to call in Sanat Kumara. Okay, Raj, I guess it’s over to you for whatever you would like to discuss today.
Sanat Kumara (Raj): Greetings, one and all. It’s my pleasure to join you today. You all seem to be in a playful mood. This is so valuable in these days. Hold to that.
And you, Rob, in particular, are feeling such a deep sense of contentment. Yes, of course, it helps to watch that beautiful granddaughter of yours. Even today, just sitting with her, allowing her to nap [while] laying on your chest. Life need not be more complicated than that.
Just allow yourself to feel that at all times — the love and the wonder of a small child. The innocence, the purity, it evokes within you, that same feeling. This is all that’s required, nothing more complicated than that.
And you keep coming back to these thoughts of, “How are we going to achieve the sense of unity consciousness across the planet of all peoples, [because] everything seems so divided?” If it is divided, that is through your choice. Unity consciousness starts with just believing that you are, in fact, all one. You all come from the same source.
It doesn’t matter what people do, what people say, what they believe. You’re all from the same source, the same energy. You are, in fact, all one.
Does that mean you all have to think alike, believe the same, act the same? Of course not. Mother-Father-One do not want that. All of you are here as a unique expression of that one energy, and it should be that varied. But all of you, as you participate in this life, should honor that, should respect that, that you will, in fact, all have different beliefs, different thoughts, different ways of approaching life.
If you disagree with someone, what does that matter? At the end of the day, there’s no such thing as right or wrong, for in reality, when you all come down to the basic understanding of what life really is — this life on this planet — that you will find that all of you are wrong to some degree. So what does it matter if someone else thinks differently than you?
There’s such a fixation on partisanship — and I don’t mean political parties. I mean anything that divides you, one person against another, one people against another. It’s all rather meaningless, for you all come from the same source, so anything that divides you, makes you think that you are in some way different from another, is simply your own construct, your own belief system, separating you from another.
