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Making Things Happen -- the Magic
of It All
by Mike Maciel
There is this person (I'm not naming names) whom I have known for 32 years. She
always gets the best parking space. It is as though every store and shopping mall
in the country has a sign with her name on it right next to the blue one, about six
paces from the front door. It doesn't matter if it's the opening night for Lord of
the Rings or Christmas Eve at Toys R Us -- her spot is always there. And if it's
not, within 30 seconds someone will pull out, just as she drives up. And it's not
as if this happened a few times, and everyone said, "Wow!" No, it happens
so consistently that her friends call her the Parking Queen. She always gets a good
parking space.
I, on the other hand, do not. I blame it on my early years in Catholic school where
the nuns taught us not to demand too much for ourselves, to be polite, and to do
good things for others. This reached such a pinnacle in me that as a teenager doing
my own grocery shopping, I would purposely pick out the overripe and bruised bananas
so that others wouldn't get stuck with them. Not surprisingly then, I would also
pick the farthest parking space, so I wouldn't deprive some elderly person the convenience
of a short walk .
Today, as a result of this early training, I couldn't find a good parking space if
I tried. The patterns deep within my psyche simply will not allow it. I might as
well wear a sign that says, "No, please, you first!" You can take the boy
out of Catholic school, but you can't take the Catholic school out of the boy.
So often in our attempts to make things happen we ignore those deep and hidden factors
within us. They are like the part of the iceberg that determines which way the tip
goes. The wind may change direction, but it's the ocean current that moves the ice.
How many times have we huffed and puffed on the visible circumstances of our lives
by repeating affirmations, praying on our knees, or invoking the magical powers of
the forces of nature, with absolutely no effect, or, if there was an effect, it was
negative? Like Paul Simon, in one of his songs, says, "Believing I had supernatural
powers, I slammed into a brick wall." Ouch.
If we tell ourselves that we are always going to get a good parking space, like my
friend, but inside we have these beliefs that say we won't (or shouldn't), then no
amount of repetitious affirmation or prayer is going to override that. Unless we
get inside, where those beliefs are manufactured, and alter them so that our inner
voice matches our outer voice, we will be doomed to driving around and around the
parking lot, at least until the law of averages kicks in and rescues us.
Can we make things happen, or do things happen to us automatically? We have been
asking this question for thousands of years. Is there a God who answers our prayers,
or does the universe simply respond to what we put out? Is there a difference? Is
it merely a matter of technique, or do we have to know someone? This is a hotly debated
issue. Moses said that if we screw up, we have to pay. Jesus gave us a blank check
called love. Catholics say that the check is no good unless they co-sign it. Then,
A Course in Miracles comes along and says there is no check. What are we to do?
If our lives really are like the iceberg, driven by larger, unseen forces, it might
behoove us to get on the side of those forces. Real magicians know this. They can
sense the hidden currents, and they know when and where they change direction. In
Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, the hero pretends to cause
a solar eclipse in order to avoid execution. He knew the date, and just happened
to know about the eclipse. The locals thought it was magic. This does not mean, however,
that magic is merely going with the flow or just happening to be at the right place
at the right time. If so, it would not be magic.
Here's why: The laws of magic closely mirror those of physics. Objects in motion
tend to remain in motion. Objects at rest tend to remain at rest. It's easier to
change the direction of an object if it is already moving, as long as it's not moving
too fast. It's harder to turn a car's steering wheel when it's parked than when it
starts moving, and tricky if it's going 100 mph.
The same is true about the conditions of our lives. Circumstances are never static.
They are either stuck where they are, meandering in an "up for grabs" transitional
phase, or heading full bore toward their ultimate conclusion. A good magician learns
to identify these stages. If conditions are stuck, he or she leaves them alone, or
finds a way to get them moving. If they are going full bore, he either finds a way
to bleed off some of the energy, or jumps off. The most beneficial time is the transitional
phase, which is always worth waiting for, because it is changeable. The most powerful
tool in the magician's handbag, therefore, is good timing.
Studies have shown that it is easier to quit smoking if you simultaneously change
some other major part of your life, such as beginning an exercise routine. In terms
of magic, this is bleeding off some of the energy, diverting it to another task.
If you are unable to find good parking, perhaps working on your timing is what is
needed. If you are psychically tuned in to everyone else who believes that good parking
is hard to find, you will all arrive when the parking lot is most crowded. The "hard-to-find"
vibration is what you are programming into your psyche, not "good parking."
Unless you address the timing issue first, no amount of mind energy is going to clear
a space for you.
Just because Science has yet to identify the invisible forces of mind or mapped out
its public domain doesn't mean that these things don't exist. And having experienced
them for ourselves does not mean that we're crazy. It simply means that we are experiencing
God's creation in its entirety, at least as far as we're concerned.
Knowing how the larger spectrum of our life works and applying the principles as
we understand them is simply good living. There is nothing wrong with making things
happen, as long as we do not prevent others from doing the same. This is part of
the joy of life, as well as its adventure. Remember the old adage: There is more
to the unseen than there is to the seen.
Michael Maciel lives in Omaha, Nebr., and is the author of the website INTU, located
at www.intu.org. Ordained in 1972, Mike has led seminars and classes in Omaha and
Kansas City for the past 10 years. He specializes in the interpretation of ancient
spiritual teachings in the light of contemporary scientific understanding. E-mail
him at rmmaciel@earthlink.net
Copyright (c) 2002 Michael Maciel |
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Nov
2002
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