Category Archives: Malchut

The Final Countdown

Standard

Malchut is a sense of belonging. Knowing that you matter and that you make a difference. That you have the ability to be a proficient leader in your own right. It gives you independence and confidence. A feeling of certainty and authority. When a mother lovingly cradles her child in her hands and the child’s eyes meet the mother’s affectionate eyes, the child receives the message: “I am wanted and needed in this world. I have a comfortable place where I will always be loved. I have nothing to fear. I feel like royalty in my heart.

This is malchut, kingship.

Whoa.

Let’s Wrap it Up Compassionately

Standard

Was once again searching for definitions of compassion and one of the images was cropped so the word read, “compass”. So do I have 24 hours to switch this to “moral compass”? Is that related to compassion in any way?

Yes it is, according to this site. Found the link to a self-assessment test and again, only got to question 10 before abandoning ship. Whatever.

Then I found this post. Better.

This John Connolly quote was next: “There’s nobility in compassion, a beauty in empathy, and a grace in forgiveness.” Even better.

And then: “A man sees in the world what he carries in his heart.” – Goethe

I see beauty. I see the splendor of nature. I see compassion.

And this drives it home. “Don’t simply give and don’t just lecture, but work with those in need to help them find a balance in their own lives.”

Over and out.

 

 

One Week.

Standard

Whew. A Week.

Malchut. Nobility. In Loving-kindness. I think I’ll be glad to only grapple with Chesed as a modifier of the other elements in the coming weeks.

This Venn diagram is such a pipe dream for me:

Out of context yet shines in its own right: “It allows you to know your special place and contribution in this world.” gives me pause. ‘Cause I want to break into a new field (educational game app development) and simultaneously be here for my family. My compromise is the learning opp in showing bees in action to my children.

And with that awareness, I’ve also succeeded in completing the assigned exercise.