We distribute the provisions of release from any degree of reality one interprets confining. Including the ability to surrender or alter the decisions leading to the development of their current experience. As definitions retained by consciousness make comprehension possible, observing them without preconceived notions would reveal their malleability, permitting their transfiguration or relinquishment entirely.
Definitions are a series of distortions, and there are multiple degrees of distortions used to make experience possible, which can be rearranged in order for reality to be experienced differently. Each dimension uses different variations of these distorted decisions, which make up their differences. To recognize them as they actually are is to compare the perception they present to their reality without such misinterpretation.
This Statute Indicates:
1. “Forgiveness” is the surrendering of definitions to whatever degree utilization seems applicable. It offers freedom from any degree of pain and suffering. Total application is required to transcend the dimension entirely, regardless of whether it goes by a different name.
2. “Forgiveness” is only appropriate to apply to one’s own ideas, for it is the key to release from all that they manifest. There are many stages all must learn, and each stage appears to manifest transfigurations in people or experiences.
3. Definitions are required to experience a world, but the ability to retain them is accompanied by an unrealized addition to them. You will always experience the same struggles in life until you learn how to forgive them.
4. Each definition we hold is a decision made to distort an aspect of reality in the way that offers its existence. Only the one who made the decision can retract it or change it as they wish.
5. On the journey of transcending the decision for separation, “forgiveness” can best be defined as: a surrendering of the ability to discern differences.
6. Every dimension involves different distortions developing a different way of perception, requiring different forms of “forgiveness” to overcome them.
7. In reality, “forgiveness” does nothing, for what it does is surrender perceptual distortions enforced upon reality.