The Top Ten Things Dead People Want to Tell You

Free The Top Ten Things Dead People Want to Tell You by Mike Dooley

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Authors: Mike Dooley
intellectually grasping the true mechanics of manifestation. But you can see the evidence in your life as you begin to notice the seemingly uncanny resemblance between your worldview and what physically occurs, paying special attention to which comes first. And just as you might not know how a TV works or what happens when you press the remote button to change a channel, you can still know that it works and that you are the one giving the commands.
    When you hold a vision in thought—tangible or intangible, cars or confidence—circumstances gradually realign, players and partners are assembled or scattered, and it’s drawn into your experience. As if by magic, except that it’s by universal law, this is how thoughts become things.
    It’s the confluence of all this—all that you think, believe, and expect—that shapes your life and death . And just as a gold coin might lie on your horizon, so can and does all else you dwell upon, including new relationships, promotions, relocations, adventures, and more. Some of these will appear quicker than others, some won’t show up at all, and then there’ll be some surprises the logistics and choreography of which are far too complicated for the human mind to track—but not for divine mind.
    And so, just as you will have no mortal knowledge of when a dreamed-of gold coin might arrive, the same is true of death. Yet when it does arrive, no matter how it does, it won’t be random and it will have been created by the one who moves beyond, because she was ready, the time was right, and the choreography was divinely managed.
Thinking the loss of a loved one was unfortunate, ill timed, sad, or an accident is to miss the gift.
    S URVIVORS
    All such gyrations, attractions, and manifestations, of course, take into account the survivors: loved ones and witnesses. It’s obviously not in the way survivors would ever consciously choose, but anyone who experiences the loss of a loved one is similarly ready. There are no accidents. It is seen as a probability that will be worth everything else that has come from the relationship. It’s better to have loved and “lost” than not to have loved—especially when nothing is really lost. The loved one’s passing wasn’t set in stone, but it was within a range of probabilities. It may have hurt like “hell” and been among the least desired outcomes for those grieving, yet they, too, were ready:
To live life on new terms,
To raise the bar on understanding life’s “mysteries,”
To see through the illusions, and
To know that life is indeed beautiful, orderly, and full of love.
    Thinking that the loss of a loved one was unfortunate, ill timed, sad, or an accident is to miss the gift and remain in the dark. It denies the perfection and order that are otherwise so abundantly obvious in every life—including its end.
From a Dearly Departed
Hi, Daddy!!
It’s Kaley!!! I’m fine!! I’m here!! I love you!!
Sorry about your car. I know it’s me you miss, but still, very uncool about the train … LOL
Daddy, you told me everything happens for a reason, right? Well, I can’t explain the train, but I can explain … this … me, here.
Daddy, I got what I came for, to know I’m loved just as I am, that I never needed to justify my existence—you gave me that … Mom needed the grounding that only a believed-in loss can give … and you … if I hadn’t died, you would have.
I know you’d have traded places with me, but that’s not how it works. Nothing would have been gained.
You’ve been praying … haven’t you? A lot. Every day.
You never prayed before, ever. Did you? You once said God was “wishful thinking.”
But your prayers have been heard! You’re reading this, aren’t you?!
Daddy, you’re “waking up” to new ideas that until my death you never would have considered. As far as you were concerned, they didn’t matter. You made me the only thing that mattered in your life and you stopped living your own. Now, because of the

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