Enter the Mandala: The Law of Relativity
Here it is! #9 in the Enter the Mandala Project. This is a series of 12 mandala paintings co-created with my Guides to help understand the Universal Laws.
This is “The Law of Relativity”
So what does it mean?
You create your misery by comparing yourself and your life to what you judge as better people, circumstances, or times. Everything is relative. But do you use the Law of Relativity to your advantage or disadvantage?
Nothing has meaning except the meaning you give it. Love what is and be happy.
You can break free from your limiting perceptions through the creative transformation of mind and spirit. Use your judgements to teach and guide you out of the darkness and into the Light.
Read on to find out more about the intuitive reading, creative process, and symbolism in this painting.
These guided visual journeys make for great entertainment. But they’re a lot more.
Packed with symbolism, they’re a source for creative inspiration and learning.
While you listen (23 minutes), notice your judgments about events in the story. Let your observer-self help you recognize that nothing has meaning but the meaning you give it.
You’ll notice my painting doesn’t include the whole story … I left out the prisoners being roasted on a skewer at the poolside feast… they didn’t seem to mind their fate, but I definitely put meaning into it.
Here’s the Spirit Calling Card spread from the start of the reading.
The Creative Process
All sorts of comparisons stopped me from being in love with the present:
- I tried painting the animals in relation to the size of the children and they ended up lost on the canvas. I painted over those.
- I kept comparing my representational figures to other artists’ work and to reality – yikes!
- I missed the vibrancy of colours in previous mandalas…
It’s only when I stopped comparing that I could enjoy the process.
But my experience wasn’t a loss. It was part of my Guides’ teachings – a gift. Seeing it that way cleared the path for my 12-hour flow the next day.
The Symbolism
Main Characters
Our main characters in this story created chaos through comparisons. Kids and bluejays arguing about games. Rattlesnakes fighting over a book. Rabbits having a tug-of-war with a carrot.
Instead of enjoying their fun, wisdom, clarity, abundance, creativity, and intelligence, they used the Law of Relativity to their disadvantage.
This isn’t good or bad. It just is. These experiences are what led them to the lessons that came after.
The Well
Once inside the fortress, they met a judge, who acted as both their teacher and their guide.
Everyone had a different reaction when he showed them a well. They related it to their past.
For the kids and dog, it was a good thing. They remembered drinking and splashing around after playing in the heat.
But for the snakes, it was a bad thing. They were afraid because one fell down a well and the other had to pull him up with the bucket.
The rabbits also judged it negatively. They’d lost a baby when machinery arrived to dig up a new well.
The well on the screen had no meaning except the meaning they gave it.
Traditionally, a well symbolizes a womb, birth, rebirth, forgiveness, Divine Love, cleansing, and quenching our thirst for higher knowledge.
By understanding the Law of Relativity, we too are offered a chance at rebirth.
Chess
I’m not a chess player, so I was curious to read why my Guides had chosen this symbol. My first thought was that it had to do with contrast or black & white thinking.
According to vopus.org,
“this game transposes cosmic archetypes, truths about the initiatory road and talks about the ingredients necessary to efficiently fight against the Ego.”
Many who teach the Law of Relativity say that it’s through our tests and initiations that we’re given what we need to strengthen our Light. Mindful effort and step-by-step decision-making will creatively transform our mind & spirit. This is what the game of chess is all about.
Fortress & Firecrackers
A fortress can mean many things:
- the obliteration of something at its roots
- elimination of negativity or troubles
- security / positive power
Firecrackers represent:
- a fresh new outlook on life
- celebration
- beauty blossoming out of darkness
- positive new changes
In my vision, the children and creatures strapped themselves to firecrackers to shoot above the fortress walls and back into a better version of their lives.
They broke free from their limiting beliefs and judgments.
Your Turn
Try this. The next time you have a negative judgment about yourself, someone else, or anything at all, stop.
- Figure out what you’re comparing.
- Congratulate yourself for noticing it.
- Remind yourself that there are no judgments – good or bad, better or worse, until the mind gets involved and compares it to other things.
- Analyze what you’re meant to learn here.
- Love what is, no matter what. (The Work by Byron Katie is a great tool for this).
It’s your responses to the situations in your life that are important for your growth. There will always be people who are richer, happier, thinner, more fit, more productive, more intelligent, more successful, etc. The reverse is also true.
If you’re going to compare your life to others, focus on what’s working for you. Use the Law of Relativity to your advantage, not your disadvantage.
Are you focusing on what’s going well or what’s going wrong in your life.
Are you focusing on the challenges or on the gifts that came from them?
What’s one comparison you’ve made today that led to feeling bad? Turn it around to help you feel better. Tell us about it in the comments below.