I notice how quickly I assign value before I question whether something actually brings peace.
Review IV
Lesson 147
🌿 Something captures attention,
and almost immediately it feels important.
Worth pursuing.
Worth protecting.
Worth reacting to.
That assignment happens before I fully examine what it creates in me.
🧩 (L133) I will not value what is valueless.
What I value determines the direction of my perception. If I continue assigning importance to what creates conflict, I continue reinforcing the same experience.
🧩 (L134) Let me perceive forgiveness as it is.
Forgiveness is not overlooking truth. It is releasing the interpretation that was never true to begin with.
These lessons expose how tightly value and perception are connected.
What I protect shapes what I experience.
What I forgive loosens its hold.
Today I’m paying attention to what I automatically treat as important and what I continue making real through interpretation.
Not forcing release.
But becoming more willing to question what I’ve been defending.
... Read moreReflecting on Lesson 147 of A Course In Miracles has been an enlightening journey for me, especially as it highlights the connection between what I value and the reality I experience. One profound insight is how often I rush to assign importance to something without stopping to ask if it truly brings me peace. This automatic valuation tends to reinforce conflicts when I keep defending what may ultimately not serve my well-being.
The lesson’s emphasis on forgiveness helped me reconsider my approach to past grievances and misunderstandings. Forgiveness here isn't about overlooking truth but about letting go of interpretations that were never accurate to begin with. This subtle but crucial distinction has transformed how I relate to old wounds and conflicts. By releasing the false narratives, I’ve noticed a loosening of emotional burdens that once felt immovable.
Another transformative realization stems from the phrase, "My mind holds only what I think with God." This suggests that the peace I seek is accessible when I align my thoughts with higher truth, rather than the often chaotic stories my ego constructs. It inspires me to become more willing to question what I instinctively defend as important.
In my personal experience, applying this lesson has meant pausing when I feel a strong reaction to something—whether it's a judgment, fear, or frustration—and asking myself: "Am I valuing this because it brings peace, or am I reinforcing conflict through my attachment?" Over time, this practice has cultivated a calmer mind and deeper spiritual clarity.
Overall, Lesson 147 offers a valuable framework for reshaping perception through mindful valuation and heartfelt forgiveness. It reminds us that what we protect shapes our experience, and by shifting what we hold precious, we open pathways to healing and peace. This is a lesson worth revisiting regularly as part of spiritual growth.