Yes…You Can Create Miracles Carolyn Godschild
Miller, Ph.D.
Beavers
to the Rescue
Driving
through the Rocky Mountains at night, Karen and her boyfriend Mike were moving
too fast to negotiate a tight turn. They
drove right off the side of the mountain.
Plunging into the darkness below,
Karen remembers feeling relaxed and amused.
On the one hand, she knew that people who drive off cliffs don’t live
very long, but on the other, she had the irrational conviction that everything
was going to be just fine. She found
herself slipping into an altered state of consciousness that was serene and
even whimsical, and Mike did too.
Time
seemed to slow down and expand, and many thoughts drifted lazily through
Karen’s head. “Well,” she reflected
ironically, “I guess this is why they tell you to wear seat belts!” Yet, despite the fact that logic told her she
and Mike were about to die, she was absolutely confident that everything would
turn out fine.
Surprisingly,
it did! The car splashed down in the
middle of a beaver pond just deep enough to break its fall. Karen and Mike climbed out onto the roof,
where they joked and sang songs to pass the time until a motorist noticed their
skid marks and summoned help. They, and their car were towed out of the pond without a
scratch.
The local
people who gathered at the scene were amazed by the fact that Karen and Mike
and their vehicle had come through such a spectacular fall unscathed. Even more amazing was the fact that those who
lived nearby swore there hadn’t been a pond there earlier in the day.
Were you ever in a situation like this where disaster
seemed inevitable, and then -- as if by magic – things turned out fine? If so, it’s just possible that you
experienced an actual miracle. After
some 25 years spent studying divine intervention, I’m convinced that you don’t
have to be anyone special to receive it.
What you do have to do is to
ask for it in the right way.
As it turns out, Karen and Mike spontaneously did
precisely what spiritual traditions around the world say you ought to do if you want a miracle: They went into a peaceful, meditative state
of consciousness, where they were in a position to receive divine
guidance. When an endangered person executes
a procedure widely believed to result in miracles -- only to have an outcome
that seems miraculous occur -- I think there’s good reason to suppose it isn’t
a mere coincidence.
In Creating Miracles
I focus on what I call “miracles of deliverance,” situations where someone is threatened with serious harm or even
death, as the result of an accident, assault or illness, and things have
reached a stage where most people would confidently expect a very negative
outcome. Someone’s car is engulfed in a high-speed,
multiple-vehicle collision on the freeway.
While being treated for pneumonia, a woman learns that her breast cancer
has metastasized to her lungs, and her doctors give her only a few months to
live. A Jewish couple is held at
gunpoint by Arab terrorists who have killed others, and have come there specifically
to rob and kill them. I’m talking about situations where even
people who don’t believe in divine intervention might spontaneously exclaim “It
would take a miracle to save that person now!”
Interestingly,
those who survive situations like these all seem to report that they found
themselves slipping into a deeply peaceful, altered state of consciousness,
variously characterized as “totally fearless,” “unconditionally loving,”
“intensely focused,” and sometimes even “humorous,” or “whimsical.” Despite impending doom, they set aside fear
and anger, and retreat into a detached and loving state of mind that sounds
very much like a profound state of meditation.
Often they say that time slowed down for them, allowing an opportunity
for deep reflection in situations that were objectively occurring at lightning
speed. Many report
hearing an inner voice, or feeling a loving and authoritative inner presence
prompting them to say or do something they would never have considered
otherwise. And when
they followed this impulse, their unusual response often turned out to be the
very thing that defused the danger and led to the happy ending.
I’m convinced that the key to miracles lies in the
peculiar shift in consciousness that always seems to precede their occurrence. By choosing peace and love
over fear and anger, I believe we do our part to make divine guidance and
intervention possible. We acknowledge
our inability to solve the problem on our own, and truly “turn the problem
over” to our “higher power.”
But
don’t take my word for it. Let me invite
you to try this procedure and see for yourself whether it works. You don’t have to wait for a life-or-death
emergency -- your success in small things will increase your confidence if you
ever do find yourself in a more critical situation. If miracles are real, and available to anyone
willing to embrace peace and love, isn’t it high time you created some of your
own?
Based on the book Creating
Miracles: A Practical Guide to Divine Intervention
© 2006 by Carolyn Miller. Printed with permission of New
World Library, Novato, CA, www.newworldlibrary.com
or 800-972-6657 ext. 52.
Carolyn Godschild Miller,
holds a PhD in Experimental Psychology. She and her husband Arnold Weiss are
founding directors of the Los Angeles-based Foundation and Institute for the
Study of A Course in Miracles. She lives in Los Angeles, CA.
Copyright
© 2000-2006
Life Challenges