Opinion
Of Mentors And Mediums
Individual human beings are often mentored and guided daily without knowing the sources, purposes and mechanism of such rich bounties which they enjoy. A mentor is an experienced person who advises and helps less experienced persons, while a medium is someone endowed with the power to receive messages from distant and far memories, and then transmit same to a few persons open to such promptings. Distant and far memories should be understood to mean hierarchies of consciousness or awareness, ranging from the mundane to the transcendental.
It is to be expected that there is a defined range of awareness common to humans, having to do with the prevailing level of maturity, just as there is a defined range of sound waves (measured in decibels), which human ears are capable of catching. This translates into the fact that human senses of perception are limited to some definite range. However, humans are endowed with another medium of perception beyond the grossly limited sensory one, to which the majority of humans pay a greater homage. Thus all humans cannot be described as being equal with regards to openness to radiations from distant and far memories.
There are benevolent individuals and organisations that devote resources for the purposes of mentoring, guiding and helping less privileged persons in society. Expectedly, there are conditions necessary to qualify persons in need of help to be able to receive such help. One of such conditions would require knowing of the existence, nature and operational mechanism of reachable mentors who are devoted to helping humans. Not all mentors and helpers are registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission as humanitarian agencies.
Inequalities among humans arise largely as a result of personal negligence and other deficiencies, whereby individuals allow themselves to be misguided by prevailing aspirations and values. Thus free will as an endowment common to every individual, becomes a means predisposing a number of persons to stagnate or retrogress through inability to exert themselves diligently. Surely, mentorship places diligence in personal exertion as a precondition to help aspiring persons. Neither would aspirations focused on mundane values and avarice endear anyone to noble-minded mentors or benevolent helpers.
Help and support are meant to be given largely to those who deserve them based on the nature of their strivings as well as the level of diligence therein. The guiding philosophy of mentorship and mediumship is based on genuine love for the well-being of humanity. Personal volition comes next after love, because no mentor or helper would do anything contrary to the volition of any individual. This article will focus attention on invisible mentors and helpers who seek to guide individuals who fulfill conditions for their support, whose major goal is to pull erring humans out of the pool of darkness. We live and move in such darkness!
What humans refer to as the beyond or hereafter covers endless vast regions and planes where human souls sojourn after earthly departure, according to their various degrees of maturity, awareness, recognitions of the issues and meanings of existence, as well as the nature of atonement necessary to be made. Humans on Earth engage in such frolicsome activities which depict pathetic ignorance and immaturity, which become recognisable after earthly death. Invisible mentors seek to help erring humans out of such plight.
Humans are endowed with conscience as a means to judge and stay away from wrong actions and thoughts. Mentors and helpers use the conscience as a medium to admonish erring humans, but they would not compel anyone to heed their admonitions. Similarly, they use the intuition (which may be called the still, small voice) as well as dreams as other media to pass vital ideas to individuals via pictures and symbols. Individuals whose conscience get clouded and obtuse, and whose intuitive perceptions become dull and blunt, miss out the bounties from the mentors and guides.
The mechanism of prayers, supplications, invocations and meditations follow the established rule of communication, whereby only that which lies closest to you can always find connection with you. You do not count six and seven without starting from one and two, etc; therefore similar mechanism applies in mentorship and mediumship, neither does it require a professor of languages to teach children basic alphabets. Nature, like creation itself, abhors a vacuum or gap, otherwise everything would crumble and collapse. Therefore, rules of engagement guide every activity, leaving no gaps!
Communication is never a one-way or one-sided affair because individuals send out their volition according to their needs, and also can receive feed-back from distant sources for various purposes. In all such mechanism, the well-being rather than the undermining of humanity counts as most vital. The collective experiences of humanity remain stored in the archives of Natural History, arranged in the order of homogeneity. It happens that from time to time, a few individuals can be exposed to some aspects of past events which can be communicated to the public, albeit in a greater distorted rendering.
Mediums, as persons with highly rarefied consciousness (which is not always a permanent state) can mediate information from distant and far memories for the benefit of humanity. Such information may be intended to warn the public about some impending events, or it may be a means of opening to the public some rare knowledge for the future. In some cases, some mediums put the ideas mediated to them into writing which an obtuse public may find very hard to appreciate. For fear of ridicules such ideas may become lost to humanity because a medium fears to publish ideas received from rare sources.
In the case of Francis Bacon (1561-1626) who was one such high medium, William Shakespear, an astute stage manager, became a ready means of using plays and drama to pass on messages mediated from far memories. Human beings and nations lose out when material values and aspirations predominate, and when no heed is paid to mentors and mediums. Thus, we are mocked with art! Good leadership demands high mentorship.
By: Bright Amirize
Dr Amirize is a retired lecturer from the Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
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