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I Die Daily

Writer's picture: Jennifer LasellJennifer Lasell

Group work is the measure by which one is accomplishing for the greater good. It’s not just the individual. In fact, it’s never about the individual self but rather has its scientific basis in the impact upon the whole – universe. Dr. Chopra often describes a concept called “Emergence.” Group work has its footing in theories of emergence: a word used to describe a phenomenon where what once did not exist now exists.


In one fell swoop, I came out triumphant. The doctors managed to lift the baby out of my womb by c-section. He was perfectly well developed, a little too much so, as it seemed apparent that this late arriver didn’t want to leave his perfectly snug environment. This same babe also held on to his milk teeth…leading me to suspect a deeper significance to his supposed tardiness…though all is in Divine Order.


A research study group I was involved in began to embark upon the topic of emergence or, more simply, Group Work. We began with a few basics: oneness, harmlessness, and pure motive. Our group intention was to get to know the True Self and, by the Laws of Analogy, God or the greater whole in which we live. The process performed was Intuitive. We didn’t work with the lower mental body, yet remained soul-identified for this work.


“That’s new!” said one group member, followed by another “Yeah, that’s new!”


While nothing under the sun is technically new because all that is already is, however, to the witnessing awareness, expansion into the areas that haven’t been pioneered before by human conscious identity, means experiencing a discovery as if it were new or ‘as if for the first time.’


The group continued with a talk by our teacher and beloved friend:


Pay attention for what’s new in your lives. This area of the work isn’t isolated to what happened here today. The discovery of which is merely a discovery of what already exists within your own center of self. I die daily is the adage, here.

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