In the symbol:
Each
circle is equal in diameter, equidistant from the center, and
interchangeable with one another. They are open to one another letting
their contents spill into the balanced center. Independently their
colors represent moods, wishes, states of being, and environments in
which an individual lives. When all colors are combined in their
maximum state of balance, none shines brighter than the others and all
that is left is pure white light.
It
is the white balance that people should seek for happiness and
healthiness, letting their own shimmering white light burst forth in a
blinding expression of themselves.
It is not easy to balance your circles,
and if you do, it is then not easy to keep them in balance. Invariably
your attentions will be drawn more predominantly toward one circle or
another at any given time and this is okay. The way you again achieve
balance is not to fight the movement of your attentions but rather to
accept them, recognize them, and then find yourself focusing on your
less frequently visited circles more often.
A
common example would be the disconnect many Americans experience with
their Material self. The material self, the green circle, refers to
that part of us that works for a living, generates income, purchases
goods and services, and takes satisfaction that our basic needs like
food and shelter are accounted for and our wants are reasonable.
Many people have a tendency to spend entirely too much time and effort on their material selves.
A fact that can easily be mathematically proven by simply comparing the
amount of time we spend working and consuming as compared to the time
we spend socializing, or reading quietly - which would indicate focus on
some of the other circles.
Placing
too much time, effort, and desire into one circle forces that circle to
swell - imbalancing the whole and indeed causing other facets in our
lives to shrink until they become all but unrecognizable.
Like
matter and energy, the self can neither be created nor destroyed, but
it can be changed and morphed into shapes that invariably damage our
health and happiness.
Any
individual's circle structure can, however, grow or shrink as a whole
depending upon the person's necessity. The circle structure does not
fall in the "more is better" paradigm, however because more is not
necessarily better for all people. Sometimes less is better. But an
individual will not have the opportunity to examine their own quantities
unless they have already balanced their own qualities - hence, the
balance of the circles of health and happiness...
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