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I Feel Like Women Should Not Tolerate Or Allow Sexism

This post answers follow-up questions for The Council from an anonymous reader in response to our post, Can You Help Me With How I View Sexism Around Me?

Anonymous: I do have a follow-up question for The Council regarding this topic (sexism). You mention allowing people to live their own path. I have a hard time allowing this behavior.

Council: How would you feel if you believed a certain way, or you did things a certain way, and people wouldn’t let you behave the way you want to? They wouldn’t allow you to have your own thoughts. That’s what you are explaining here. We are here to allow. It may be very difficult for us to allow, but we are here to learn that.

Bob: This reader seems to feel that they have a difficult time allowing this particular behavior (sexism).

Council: It doesn’t matter what the behavior is. You have some sort of problem with allowing it, and so change how you look at it. It may be upsetting for you, but can you say, “This is that spirit’s path. This is the way it wants to be. This is what it is choosing.”

They don’t need your okay to be this way, but can you open your heart to accept the way people are? You don’t have to agree with them, but you can not hope that everyone will think the way you think.

Anonymous: Why must we allow negative behavior?

Council: Because would you want to be living with robots that all behave a certain way and everyone is happy and good? What would you learn from this? How will you grow? How will you learn to expand if it’s only people who behave a certain way, who speak a certain way, and carry themselves a certain way? There’s learning in this for you. You may not like it, but you chose it.

Anonymous: Sexism is degrading and demeaning. I personally don’t feel like women should tolerate that behavior, or allow it when it comes to themselves, or when they see other people being victimized.

Council: Who are you to tell other women what they should allow and what they should accept? Again, you can only allow and accept what works for you. You can not say these women are wrong and how do they let this happen? There are reasons they are going through this and you don’t have to know what those reasons are.

Again, you are not allowing. This is your big, big lesson. So calm yourself down. Tell yourself, “I don’t need to understand this upsets me. So if people talk the way I don’t like, if they behave the way I don’t like, I don’t have to get angry. I don’t have to go into a big speech about how they’re behaving. I walk away.” Take yourself out of the presence of this sort of behavior. You’re in control. You don’t have to stand there and fight because it’s going to get you nowhere.

And you are determined to have these people act the way you want them to act. How would you like it if that was reversed?

Anonymous: Should we not help to raise peoples’ thoughts and vibrations?

Council: Yes, but you don’t stick it down anyone’s throat. And you don’t give anyone your opinion unless it’s asked, unless there’s a healthy dialog going on about this. But even if it is, allow the other people to have their say. If you can’t hear this, then you don’t belong in that dialog because you are not allowing.

Anonymous: Allowing negative behavior helps perpetuate it.

Council: In your reality. In others’ reality, allowing that behavior opens their eyes to try to find a way to change it. And so again, it’s all how you perceive it.

Anonymous: A father who is a womanizer can easily pass that behavior and thought process down to their sons.

Council: That’s one way. And another way is, the child will grow up seeing this and not agree with it, and not like it at all, and be totally different. You are going towards the negative. You are not allowing what’s going to happen. You see it only going in one direction.

Anonymous: When we have the opportunity to teach better options, shouldn’t we take it?

Council: If it’s wanted, yes. If you do it in kindness and show that there is another way without stomping all over somebody else for the way they are behaving, yes, you can do it with love. Everything with love.

Anonymous: I simply can’t turn my head and allow this negative low-vibration way of thinking. Sure, we can’t make someone think a certain way, but we can educate.

Council: If they want to be educated. There could be people around you saying, “Oh, there she goes again with a speech, with a, ‘You can’t take this, and you can’t take that, and this is not right.'” And so there are people that will look at you, where you think you’re doing a great job, and they are so tired of your behavior, but they are allowing you to do and say what you want to. It always goes in both directions.

And so we wish you all peace, and love, and happiness, and health, and adventure, and joy, and a wonderful, wonderful way of creating with your intention, with your feelings, and with your smile. Smile as you think of how you want things. It will help you immensely. So have fun with it.


We’d like to thank this anonymous reader for having the persistence and courage to take issue with The Council’s guidance in their original post, Can You Help Me With How I View Sexism Around Me? We imagine there are many people who feel the same way. By questioning The Council’s guidance it’s given The Council a valuable opportunity to make an important point about allowing people to behave in ways we don’t agree with rather than trying to change their behavior to be more in line with what we believe.

This point is not always easy to understand, yet it seems fundamental to what The Council has been teaching us for many years. We hope this anonymous reader and other readers who agree with her will be able to consider, as The Council suggests, that there are reasons these people who disagree with them are going through this different point of view, and you don’t have to know what those reasons are to allow them to believe in them.


Listen to the entire 7-minute audio recording of our session with The Council (below) to hear all their guidance for Anonymous and the rest of us, and let us know what you feel about it.

You can also ask The Council your own free question by typing it into one of the Comment boxes that appear at the bottom of most of our blog pages, and we’ll answer it when we have time. For the time being you don’t have to attach your name to the comment, but there have been a lot of anonymous comments lately, and it can be confusing for us to keep track of these. It would help us if you made up a name rather than using no name.

If you prefer to keep your comment private, you can pay $60 to speak with The Council on the telephone for a half-hour by clicking this link. Once we receive your payment, we’ll contact you by email to arrange a mutually convenient day and time for your phone call and your questions.

If you like this post, please click the LIKE button in the section following the recording to let us and other readers know. Thanks.

February 15, 2024 - Posted by | Acceptance, Audio Content, Channeling, Choice, Love, Questions & Answers, Relationships | , ,

6 Comments »

  1. Hi, Questioning. We’ll be happy to ask The Council your follow-up questions on the topic of allowing when we have time and we’ll post an audio recording of their response as soon as it’s ready. Thanks for your questions. Love and light, Bob & Cynthia

    Like

    Cynthia & Bob's avatar Comment by Cynthia & Bob | February 24, 2024

  2. Hello, I just wanted to add that I had similar follow-up questions to Anonymous above, particularly regarding the notion that practicing “live and let live” and letting people walk their own paths would not affect you yourself. If that person was a politician who enshrined limiting women’s rights into law, it would affect you if you lived in that state, regardless of you taking a non-judging approach or not…except, if you took the approach in “If We Focus On The Reality We Desire, Can We Not Be Touched By Chaos?” or focused on generating more gender equity with a light heart, as discussed in “How Can My Positivity Outweigh Other People’s Negativity?”. Am I correctly understanding how the Council’s advice intersects in relation to this issue? This approach almost seems to me like non-attachment practices in some forms of Buddhism, but there’s something uncomfortable about the idea of detaching from the suffering of others and letting it all be. It feels like giving up on bettering the world. Could I please add my questions to Anonymous’s? Thank you so much.

    Liked by 1 person

    Questioning's avatar Comment by Questioning | February 23, 2024

  3. Hi, Anonymous. We’ll be happy to ask The Council your question about allowing child molestation when we have time and we’ll post an audio recording of their response as soon as it’s ready. Thanks for your question. Love and light, Bob & Cynthia

    Like

    Cynthia & Bob's avatar Comment by Cynthia & Bob | February 16, 2024

  4. Hi, Anonymous. We’ll be happy to ask The Council your follow-up questions about sexism when we have time and we’ll post an audio recording of their response. Thanks for your follow-up questions. Love and light, Bob & Cynthia

    Like

    Cynthia & Bob's avatar Comment by Cynthia & Bob | February 16, 2024

  5. If a person enjoyed molesting children, and you could see that the child was hurt by this, then, should you allow them to be the way they are and simply step away and acknowledge that you are different?

    Liked by 2 people

    Unknown's avatar Comment by Anonymous | February 15, 2024

  6. Good afternoon. I am the anonymous reader that the above post is referencing. I appreciate your response, while unexpected, I definitely appreciate it. With that said, I do have some follow up comments I’d like to add.

    If we were to embrace the concept of “allowing” as outlined in your above post, then our society would be in a terrible place. The idea that we should allow negative or harmful behavior because it is their path is hard to fathom. If I were to see a woman getting raped in an alley, I should just ignore it because it’s their path? I should be okay with a husband murdering his wife for whatever reason he sees fit? I should be okay with children getting abused and neglected because it’s their path? There are plenty of negative and harmful behaviors that we advocate against, why not this one?

    I don’t agree with some of the assertions in your post above. I don’t go around telling men or women how to live their lives. I don’t think everyone should think like me. I have no intention of trying to control people or make them think a certain way. If a woman wants to be a prostitute, then great, her choice. However, I have never met a woman who loves to be sexually harassed, sexually abused or raped. Women shouldn’t just accept it because it’s that man’s path to violate them. Women are human beings who deserve respect and to be treated equally. As long as men continue to treat women like they are only sex objects, we will never be treated equally.

    I also acknowledged that we can’t control the way people think, but we can EDUCATE. And that certainly can be done without “sticking it down their throat” or “stomping all over somebody else for the way they are behaving”. A respectful conversation can be had and I don’t exactly know why you’re alluding to something other than that.

    Change starts when people get tired of the status quo. So as soon as more women learn what their real value is and stand up for themselves, maybe this archaic misogynistic way of men will come to an end (not all men). But as long as the behavior is “allowed”, it will never change. I want women to know their value, I want women to know they are worth more than just their sexual parts and this comes from a place of love. YOU ARE WORTH MORE!

    Liked by 1 person

    Unknown's avatar Comment by Anonymous | February 15, 2024


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