The Law of Attraction and Abundance in Nature
The Law of Attraction and the Law of Abundance is demonstrated in many ways in nature.
Everything needed to prosper is available when and where needed.
For example: a wild rose plant demonstrates the law of abundance.
The rose lives for only 5 or 6 months out of the year and remains dormant the rest of the year in a cold climate.
During the spring and summer months the rose takes advantage of the sun's warmth and soft rains and blooms on a continual basis.
The plant produces hundreds, if not thousands of blossoms.
Those blossoms provide nectar for insects and provide seeds for birds, squirrels and other small animals to eat and eventually results in thousands of new rose plants scattered across the countryside.
The rose doesn't waste energy trying to grow through the snow and ice of winter but uses that time to rest and regenerate.
This same law of what is needed when it is needed applies to animals as well.
A rabbit is born in early spring in a snug and warm den with its brothers and sisters.
Its mother feeds it until it is big enough to venture outside in the splendor of juicy green grass, ripening berries and glistening sunlight.
Everything the rabbit needs to thrive is right there in abundance.
Often the animal known as human, is blinded by what it doesn't have, rather than seeing what it does.
The law of abundance is hidden by the veil of want-to-have.
Instead of accepting that what is needed will be available, humans have a tendency to worry and concern themselves with what they don't have.
Nature exists in the present.
The past no longer exists and the future isn't here yet.
That baby rabbit is not worried about winter and that she, or he, may have to forage longer and harder.
The rabbit eats to its hearts content succulent spring ferns and summer flowers storing up fat and a thick furry coat that will naturally get it through the winter.
A glass is not half full in nature, it is overflowing.
Our nature as humans is to be focused on preparing for the future and ignoring the abundance all around us.
If we focus on the lack of something, that is exactly what we will receive.
Our glass isn't even half empty, it's completely empty and will remain so until we start attracting the fullness of life.
If we want something we have to ask for it, attract it and then fully accept it.
Everything needed to prosper is available when and where needed.
For example: a wild rose plant demonstrates the law of abundance.
The rose lives for only 5 or 6 months out of the year and remains dormant the rest of the year in a cold climate.
During the spring and summer months the rose takes advantage of the sun's warmth and soft rains and blooms on a continual basis.
The plant produces hundreds, if not thousands of blossoms.
Those blossoms provide nectar for insects and provide seeds for birds, squirrels and other small animals to eat and eventually results in thousands of new rose plants scattered across the countryside.
The rose doesn't waste energy trying to grow through the snow and ice of winter but uses that time to rest and regenerate.
This same law of what is needed when it is needed applies to animals as well.
A rabbit is born in early spring in a snug and warm den with its brothers and sisters.
Its mother feeds it until it is big enough to venture outside in the splendor of juicy green grass, ripening berries and glistening sunlight.
Everything the rabbit needs to thrive is right there in abundance.
Often the animal known as human, is blinded by what it doesn't have, rather than seeing what it does.
The law of abundance is hidden by the veil of want-to-have.
Instead of accepting that what is needed will be available, humans have a tendency to worry and concern themselves with what they don't have.
Nature exists in the present.
The past no longer exists and the future isn't here yet.
That baby rabbit is not worried about winter and that she, or he, may have to forage longer and harder.
The rabbit eats to its hearts content succulent spring ferns and summer flowers storing up fat and a thick furry coat that will naturally get it through the winter.
A glass is not half full in nature, it is overflowing.
Our nature as humans is to be focused on preparing for the future and ignoring the abundance all around us.
If we focus on the lack of something, that is exactly what we will receive.
Our glass isn't even half empty, it's completely empty and will remain so until we start attracting the fullness of life.
If we want something we have to ask for it, attract it and then fully accept it.