
When the creator made us in his image did he intend for us to feel like a god to those around us?
I am my own world, there is no denying it. I am a sun with gravitational pull. Some of the planets revolve around me while other stars are so distant they can barely be seen. I am told about them, there are stories, movies, and books written about the many stars that appear in our lives.
As a mother or father you create a new one. They revolve around you. You revolve around them in synchronicity. Your moves are mirrored by them as they age. Each action is a reflection of you. Like the earth’s moon, they hang in the balance of that gravity.
Off in the distance you see another solar system, with three, no, four revolving moons, one larger than the other. The three smaller moons manage to revolve around the other large moon independently but still tied to it.
Wow, did you see that one of the smaller moons just attracted another moon into its orbit? They seemed to collide for a minute. It’s gone. The moon left the space. Was it just a bounce-off moon?
Here on the real earth we have people (moons) who revolve around us. We collide, we rotate and we’re pulled in by their gravity. We are the suns that only shine for those who recognize us. We are bright enough to bring them light, but not so bright to light up the entire night’s sky.
They stay with us for our warmth and energy. They are tied to us through our gravity, compassion, care and love. We all move within the same solar system of energy. We give, we take.
Oh my did you see that. One of the moons, I thought was a moon, became a sun. It has its own planets revolving around it now. It has become its own solar system.
Over there, to your right, there are two competing suns. One gets brighter then fades, allowing the other to shine over the system. It is attracting suns to its space, each one with stars and moons and planets surrounding it. It is very congested.
Off in the distance I see a single sun. Nothing revolving around it. Planets come into its orbit then leave. Why does none stay? It seems like one of the larger suns. So very large compared to the suns with many planets and moons and smaller suns revolving around it.
Is there something with its energy? Does it give off too much, maybe not enough? It can attract but it has no gravitational pull to hold on.
Ahh, it’s a young sun. It seems to be trying its flares to attract stars to its surface. Oh yeah, it just sent out another directed flare. Boom, it hit. Sorry sun, not the reaction you wanted, it seemed to be repelled.
He’ll learn.
He’ll attract.
He’ll create his cosmos.
It takes time.
You can watch the skies and see the movement. You thought those shooting stars were meteors. No — they’re stars being drawn toward a new sun. Look closely, the random effects aren’t random at all, they are planned.
The brightest stars don’t attract the most. It is the larger sun that gathers the moons, pulling them closer and closer until they collide. It’s a beautiful thing. I cannot deny, I adore my suns and my stars. I would be empty without them in my orbit. I’d be lost in the cosmos. Drifting. Searching. Gliding. Floating like a nomad.
When you find the right star, hold on. Pull them in. Rotate together, you’ll love it.
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This Post is republished on Medium.
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Photo credit: iStock
