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What if time itself doesn’t move? Serge Benhayon asks us to consider that a tension is created in our body when we try to keep up with something that we have perceived as getting away from us. Could this explain why so many of us have an issue with time?
18 Comments
Andrew Mooney
28/8/2018 09:41:39 am
As someone who has had a longstanding issue with time and a lack of it, this is a very enlightening video and just knowing that we are moving with time and it is simply a measure of our planet's movement makes complete sense and totally blows this issue out of the water!
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Liane Mandalis
28/8/2018 09:09:33 pm
We create an issue with time in order to delay rebuilding our relationship with space – the realm where our true self resides, right here in our physical form.
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Lieke Campbell
5/9/2018 08:40:34 pm
So making it about not having enough time, can be just an excuse to not have to commit in full to what needs to be done and feel at the same time how grand and amazing we are.
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Joshua Campbell
7/9/2018 01:50:28 am
As always Serge Benhayon nails the issue and reveals to us that our issues with time are but a mere excuse we use to avoid embracing who we truly are.
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Leigh Matson
7/9/2018 08:48:08 am
During the summer I had a job where I would visit peoples homes, sometimes 14 visits in a day. Getting through London traffic then trying to find a parking space within 15minutes - this was stressful. But it wasn’t the time that made it stressful it was my choices. Because when I planned and prepared the job wasn’t stressful from the time from job to job. It’s how I was that made the difference and not how much time I had.
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Ingrid Ward
10/9/2018 11:39:51 pm
To hear Serge Benhayon share that our greatest hurt is that as children ‘the world didn’t cherish us for who we truly are’, made so much sense to me and I could feel the truth of it resonate through my body. Life appears to me to be set up to keep us, both girls and boys, from knowing how beautiful and amazing we are, and instead insists we need to fit into some societal expectation. No wonder so may of us struggle as adults to live in this world in a way that makes sense.
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Rik Connors
3/10/2018 04:27:53 am
I agree, I feel this at work that I am not cherished for how amazing I am. I see however, everyone around me is feeling the same. So how do we climb out of this mess? My answer would be to cherish me for all that I know myself to be right now or as Serge said move with time, be with the next, and simple appreciate the fact that I am.
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Joshua Campbell
4/10/2018 07:11:42 am
I don't remember babies or young children having issues with time. They are certainly not worried or stressed if they are born too late or for some reason sleep in or need a rest during the day. Yes it is different for adults in terms of our responsibilities but it does not mean we have to adopt a different relationship with time simply because we perceive we cannot be ourselves anymore
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Ingrid Ward
9/10/2018 12:11:32 am
When I consider the amount of time I have been stressed in my life because I thought I was 'running out of time', it is huge; probably after childhood, nearly every day of my life. How exhausting it has been to have been in this seemingly endless race against time. Then along comes Serge Benhayon and turns what I have believed to be the truth about time on its head, and in doing so, offering me a whole new relationship and understanding of time; one that makes sense and is not exhausting in the least.
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Joshua Campbell
29/10/2018 07:31:13 am
I used to live with so much anxiety, stress and tension. I thought it was totally justified and that that was the way life simple is. In fact it does not have to be this way. My anxiety, stress and tension were completely time based and as such I blamed time. It has nothing to do with time I later realise, but actually all about my relationship with myself.
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Ingrid Ward
7/11/2018 09:14:11 pm
Serge Benhayon makes so much sense in this presentation about the time but it is still taking me a while to let go of the deeply ingrained beliefs which were presented to me as a child, beliefs that I came to consider were normal. But each time I return to watch this clip I find myself slowly coming to understand the truth about time, with the understanding releasing those old stress-filled beliefs so I am free to rebuild my relationship, a true relationship, with what I, and so many of us, have made the enemy.
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Lieke
22/11/2018 07:08:32 am
Yes time, like any other number, is never lying. It lets us know where we are and we can feel at that moment what we have been doing in that space of time and when we have ourselves allowed to be distracted this creates this tension of feeling that we did not give all that we have got.
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Leigh Matson
23/1/2019 02:04:55 am
The so-called stress of time can have a hugely detrimental impact on the body. But since learning that the choices I make within time is what creates the stress and not time itself has changed everything. If I choose to fluff about in my 'spare' time then rush when I have 'little' time before a dead line then thats my choices creating the stress and not time.
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Ingrid Ward
27/1/2019 11:06:14 pm
As a person who always seemed to be ‘running out of time’ and living with the associated tension in my body, returning to this awesome snippet of wisdom from Serge Benhayon is like a very welcome refresher course; a very short but very powerful one. To know that I do not run out of time, but that I live in a way that regularly convinces me that I do, has been one of the most life-saving wisdoms I have been presented with, and over time, have come to know the truth of for myself.
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27/2/2019 10:05:18 am
I saw the title of this video and knew that it would be absolute gold for me right now, having stepped up into a managerial role and being 'pressured for time' for perhaps the first time in my working life. I had to resist the thought that I didn't have a spare 5 minutes to watch the video and watch it anyway. I am so glad that I made the choice because it has reminded me that it is our connection to the truth of who we are that is the greatest support that we can ever have. I shall continue to put this into practice throughout my day but particularly at work.
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28/2/2019 01:09:22 am
I read the title of this video this morning and knew that it was very relevant to me at the moment. I managed to overcome the feeling that I didn't have enough time to watch it before work and watched it. During the day I committed as best I could to keeping my body relaxed and making my interactions with people about quality. There were times that I could feel the familiar tug of time trying to pull me back to my list of things that still needed doing but for most of the day I was incredibly relaxed. My day flowed effortlessly, I enjoyed the interactions that I had with people and I got heaps done.
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Viktoria
17/3/2019 12:17:03 am
When I think I'm running out of time, my body jumps in an anxious state. It's almost as if on the inside there's a fly that's being chased around, flapping its tiny wings ever so nervously trying to escape death.. I can feel it right in my diaphragm, and it is very unsettling. However when I let myself surrender and focus on the quality of what I am doing, time doesn't even come into consideration.
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Viktoria
24/5/2019 09:57:30 pm
Our perception of the world dictates everything, how we see a situation can be vastly different to how others see the world simply because we have built a perception that makes sense to us. But if we hold onto the our perception we will never be able to see what is really going on because our view will always be tainted. Kind of like taking off your glasses, you see the world differently - different colours, perhaps more broad etc.
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SERGE BENHAYON –
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