Humans have a complex relationship with water. You worry about having too little of it, and you worry about having too much. You fear its absence, and you fear its power. You use it to live, to eat, to operate entire systems. At the same time, sometimes you even disdain it, trying to adjust it to your taste and preferences, and sometimes you avoid it altogether.
You know that water is a dominant component of your body, but you don’t fully understand what that means. You know that water represents your emotions, your emotional world, but you also don’t fully grasp its significance.
When we spoke in a previous session about the Star of David, we discussed the natural flow of feeling and expression. This is your natural flow as human beings—you feel emotions, desires, needs, passions, dreams, and naturally express them. Less naturally, you compartmentalize them, hide them, deny them, try to overcome them, suppress them, dismiss them, and occasionally express them.
This is how we describe the transition you’ve gone through from childhood to adulthood. As children, you feel and express; as adults, you feel and rarely express. The difference is significant, as we have described before, and we will describe it again now.
What you don’t feel and don’t express remains within, hidden in the shadows; it doesn’t truly disappear. This begins to create excess, and excess creates lack. Metaphorically speaking, water starts to accumulate when you silence yourself. You create dams in your consciousness, cutting off your flow.
Finding the Middle Path
You might say there is no other way because that’s how the world works. The world is not composed of children; it’s made up of adults, and being an adult involves a set of rules, manners, customs, and habits. This is indeed true. We cannot tell you that you need to leave all that behind and return to being children entirely.
Continuing in the spirit of our previous session, we would say that what you can aim for is to find the middle path, the one that connects childhood to adulthood, the inner child to the inner adult.
As adults, while living in a world of rules and customs, you can create a freer flow for yourselves—a fuller sense of feeling and expression than you have created so far.
To assist you in this, you can simply work with water. By its very nature, water represents the flow we described here.
Creating Living Water
Water can easily carry any frequency you charge it with. If you speak to water in a certain way, it will hold the frequency of what you said. Speak words of love to it, and it will carry the frequency of love, transmitting it wherever it goes. Speak angry or hurtful words, words of hatred or war, and it will carry that frequency and bring it to wherever it reaches.
Sometimes people work with “living water”—water that still bubbles with creation. This is water that has not been interfered with in its sourcing, creation, or movement from place to place. Some people find natural sources of living water, that is, sources where creation still bubbles within. Some know how to turn water into living water through energetic means.
The way to do this is simple—speak words of love to the water. We suggest you try this right now. Take two glasses of water. Set one aside. Hold the other in your hands, look at the water, and speak words of love to it as if you were speaking to someone you love. Bring love, appreciation, and gratitude to the water.
Once you’re finished, do a comparison—drink a bit from the glass you set aside, then drink from the glass you spoke loving words to. You may notice a difference, how the texture of the water changes, how the taste changes.
This is the simplest way to turn water into living water. For what is creation? It is love in motion. The movement of love drives everything. But as human beings, you have many fears, and these fears halt the natural flow of love. “This is allowed, this isn’t, this is forbidden, this isn’t, this isn’t appropriate, this isn’t polite.” In this way, different parts of you are cut off and set aside. They accumulate, creating excess that results in lack, a lack that leads to even more shortages and issues.
The Two Layers of Creation
Water reminds you of the natural flow of love. In your physical world, it represents it. We could indeed say that everything is made of love, even the heaviest stone, but water by its nature represents the flow of love that creates the world. This is because it is essential to life on Earth, to everything that grows and lives in this world; because it is in motion; because it can change form and state; and because it carries a frequency that can shift according to intention.
Water represents the natural flow of love, and when you work with water, you are reconnecting with the creation within you. When you work with water—in any way, it doesn’t matter—you remind yourself of your nature, that is, the flow of feeling and expression. When you add to this the ability to hold a frequency stemming from intention and to change form, you embody the entirety of the creator.
Being creators in the body, or as we define it, homeowners, consists of the two layers we have described here.
The first layer is the natural flow—you feel and express. For children, this happens almost indiscriminately. You feel emotions, desires, passions, dreams, needs, and express them without interference, without prohibition, and without worrying about consequences. This is your basic nature.
The second layer is your intention and the transformation, or change of form, that you can create consciously. This is the conscious layer, which you can and are developing more and more. If the first layer of feeling and expression exists instinctively, the second layer of intention and creating transformation must be consciously built.
What you learn in processes of growth is to build this second layer, which transforms you from human beings to divine beings in human form. You use intention to influence and, in doing so, create transformation, change of form.
Water embodies these two layers together. It is the liquid essence of the creator; the embodiment of the creator or creation in the physical realm. It represents and reminds you of both layers—feeling and expression, intention and transformation.
When you work with water—whether in the simplest way, such as drinking or bathing in it, or in more complex ways, such as meditating in water—you are working with a material that reminds you of creation and of your own creator nature.
Identifying the Blockage
When you work with water consciously, you can use it to identify where a blockage may exist. Your blockage may occur in one of three areas.
The first is in feeling—perhaps your feelings are blocked. Maybe you don’t feel emotions, desires, needs, or passions.
The second is in expression—your willingness to say, do, and manifest what you feel.
The third is in intention—perhaps your intention is not aligned. Consciously, you might want something, but there is a hidden intention. Remember this concept? Conscious intention versus hidden intention. It may be that the blockage is reflected in your intentions.
A blockage in one or more of these areas prevents transformation. When you work with water consciously, in a way more advanced than simply drinking or bathing in it—for instance, meditating while immersed in water or visualizing yourself in water—it doesn’t matter if the connection is physical or energetic; you can ask the water to show you where the blockage lies.
You can enter this process with a challenge you want to address, something you are struggling with. It could be a problem, difficulty, limitation, illness of some kind. The area doesn’t matter—whether health, finances, self-fulfillment, relationships, or your relationship with spirit. When you engage in working with water, have clarity on the challenge you seek help with. Then, connect with the water and ask it to show you where the blockage is.
Is the blockage in feeling? In expression? In intention? Perhaps in more than one. The water will reveal where the dam is, where the obstacle lies, and based on this, you can gradually create change.
The water will help you map out the areas or layers where the blockage is, a blockage that prevents transformation, or healing. This is the primary gift water can offer you.
Reconnecting with Creation
Another gift that working with water can offer is a reminder that you are part of creation. In embodying creation with all its components, when you work with water, you can help yourself remember that you are part of creation, that you are creators by nature.
In other words, working with water can aid in healing feelings of helplessness and lack of impact. When you feel that reality is overwhelming, and you have no way to face it or know what to do, connect with water; help yourself remember that you are part of creation, that you are a creator yourself.
Receiving Inspiration
Water can also help you gain inspiration. If you need new ideas or a fresh perspective on an existing situation, connect with water. You can do this in any way, whether in the shower, while drinking, or even while eliminating it from the body. When in contact with water in these ways, ask for new inspiration.
Often, this happens spontaneously. When you bathe, when you release water from the body, new ideas suddenly come, inspiration flows. This occurs because the movement of water helps create an internal flow. Water provides a type of relaxation that allows the mind to open to new ideas.
This is connected to the fact that you were created in the womb, in an environment filled with water, where the experience of safety is complete. When you come into contact with water in these ways, for a brief moment, you return to the womb, relaxing in a way you don’t always feel