top of page

Find Magic In The Needs of Others (Originally Published 2/11/2022)


Is it one’s job to see to the needs of others? That question has been heavy on my mind as I watch the huge influx of migrants penetrate our borders. Like most of you reading this blog, I am for legal migration. However, who am I to question God’s plan? If something is happening, it most certainly is God’s plan.

           

Frankly, I’ve been looking for three employees for over a year now. I believe if someone has trekked thousands of miles leaving everything they know behind to give themselves and their family a better existence, they must have a good and honorable demeanor. Could someone direct some of the country’s new residents to my business? They need work and I need employees. Sounds like a perfect match.

           

That scenario is probably never going to happen which takes me back to the question first asked at the beginning of this blog: is it one’s job to take care of everyone else? Consider the following scenarios and decide for yourself.

           

One Friday night after a long and harrowing week at the office, I found myself feeling like a hamster in one of those wheels that never stops spinning. I was hosting my own personal pity story over a real estate transaction that died after seven months of hard work to move the transaction to a closing.

           

On the way home I stopped in the drugstore (what an odd name for a store that pushes drugs out of a little corner in the back of the store – that’s a whole other blog) to get supplies to do the hair of my neighbor’s five-year old daughter in the morning. Abigail’s mother recently became disabled and was unable to take care of her daughter’s beautiful locks before school. The neighbors joined forces to take care of Abby’s hair and tomorrow was my assigned morning.

           

While standing in a long line at the cash register (another oxymoron) I overheard the attendant who was struggling to provide change to the two customers ahead of me stressfully complain that everyone wants her “little bills”. She was more than frustrated trying to accommodate everyone’s needs.

           

My conglomeration of goods came to $15. Normally I would have paid this bill with a twenty-dollar bill wanting the small bills myself for tips and the like. Instead, I hunted through my wallet and paid with two ten dollar bills commenting to the cashier that if possible I would like to reduce her stress over a lack of small dollar bill change if at all possible. The money changer grabbed my hand with both of hers and thanked me profusely for being so helpful to her. Needless to say, I could have made the ride home without a motor and wheels from the exchange of light energy I just experienced in that store.

           

Is it one’s job to see to the needs of others? You decide! Try the following affirmation for thirty days and see if your needs are not perfectly met. 

 

Affirmation:  As I see to the needs of others, my own needs are met.

“I'm Catherine Wilcox, working to help others see that God is in all things, all the time, through conscious change and self-healing.”

If you have found this message enlightening, please send it to one friend.  This action will help my vision of a more enlightened species to help usher in the new healing Age of Aquarius.

Catherine Wilcox is a Conscious Change Coach, Mentor, emotional intuitive and Writer. If you like what you read here, then you may enjoy one of her Published Books:

**Catherine’s latest Book, The New Stone Age, Crystal Data for the 21st Century, contains ten chapters of information designed to help the novice and intermediate crystologist obtain the secrets to working with crystals to help the four mind-bodies balance chaotic energy.

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page