I Prayed For Peace - God Sent Repetition
Sometimes peace doesn’t come wrapped in stillness — sometimes it comes disguised as a lesson. I didn’t realize that when I prayed for peace, God would answer by putting me in a place where the same stories replayed every day. But through that, I learned something life-changing: you can love deeply and still close the door on what no longer serves your soul.
Shutting the Door to Played-Out Storylines
There comes a point in your journey when your soul just doesn’t have the tolerance for the same stories anymore. The same excuses, the same self-inflicted chaos, the same patterns that loop like a song stuck on repeat.
For a long time, I thought being a compassionate person meant keeping every door open — listening endlessly, offering advice, holding space for everyone’s repeated pain. But something in me started to shift. I prayed for peace. And instead of quiet stillness, God gave me an assignment: working with the elderly in a dementia unit.
Every day, I hear the same stories from the same women — word for word, moment by moment, memory by memory. And you know what? Instead of frustration, I found grace. I realized that this experience was teaching me something powerful: how to stay present in love without taking on someone else’s repetition as my own.
It’s almost as if God said, “You wanted peace? Let Me show you how to hold it.”
Over time, I began to understand that this wasn’t just about my work. It was about my life. The people I’ve known for years who keep reliving the same cycles — heartbreak, drama, self-sabotage — while refusing to make a change. I used to listen out of love. But I noticed how those stories began to echo in my spirit, pulling my energy down.
And then it hit me:
You can love people and still shut the door to their repetitive storylines.
It doesn’t mean you don’t care.
It means you refuse to let their loops invade your peace.
It means you understand that their story is theirs, not yours to carry.
We often confuse empathy with absorption. But true compassion doesn’t mean letting someone’s patterns attach to your spirit. True compassion sometimes says, “I love you, but I can’t keep playing this scene with you anymore.”
Shutting that door is sacred. It’s how you protect your peace, your purpose, and your energy. And in that boundary, there’s freedom — the kind that allows both you and the other person to grow.
So, if you’re at that place where your soul just can’t tolerate the same stories anymore, know this: you’re not cold, unkind, or heartless. You’re simply evolving.
And evolution often sounds like a door closing — softly, firmly, peacefully.
If this resonates with you, take a quiet moment and ask yourself:
What storylines have you been listening to that no longer belong in your energy field?
It’s okay to lovingly close those doors.
Peace isn’t passive — it’s a sacred boundary
Shutting The Door To Played-Out Story Lines
Sometimes peace doesn’t come wrapped in stillness — sometimes it comes disguised as a lesson. I didn’t realize that when I prayed for peace, God would answer by putting me in a place where the same stories replayed every day. But through that, I learned something life-changing: you can love deeply and still close the door on what no longer serves your soul.
Everyday is a Ceremony.
Every morning is a new altar.
What is Christ Consciousness?
Christ Consciousness is truly embodying the "Christ" within or the inner Christos within.
Experiencing Christ Consciousness
There is so much controversy surrounding the idea of Christ Consciousness. Some demonize it, while others glorify it. Yet Christ Consciousness is not a concept to be debated or an image to be formed in the mind — it is something to be felt. It is not a doctrine, but a vibration; not an ideology, but a frequency that the soul recognizes.
Embracing Christ Consciousness and Holistic Healing: A Path to Restoration
Add comment
Comments