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Aspects of Using the Words “Love,” “Loving,” and “Hate” in Intentions

We often work with extensive collections of intentions concerning topics such as the military, money, God, and many others. Such collections may contain several hundred intentions already prepared by someone else, or even more if we are working directly with a newspaper article or a book.

An example would be the hundreds of Psalms of David or the Book of Job, which may be worked through directly without first converting them into intentions. Converting all the Psalms into intention statements would be at least a year’s work for a large group of people, and so far no one has undertaken such a task.

Other, less extensive sets usually contain around twenty to forty intentions devoted to past experiences and relationships connected with such themes as slavery, zoophilia, pyramid building, the creation of medicines, childbirth, and similar subjects.

In these ready-made sets, even if they have already been prepared by a group of people, several almost identical intention statements may still be missing. I noticed the absence of one sentence expressing our relationship toward a given subject and surrendering to God the intentions connected with our loving, not loving, or hating whatever theme we are currently working on.

Such a sentence should be present in every collection of intentions.

Let us assume we are writing intentions concerning being students. One such intention could be formulated as follows:

All our intentions concerning, among other things, our loving and, respectively, hating other students, teachers [and accordingly our own teachers], as well as the entire school system and education, and not only these, together with our experiencing all the consequences thereof.

It is also worth remembering to include opposites of the words being used. Doing so allows us to address both aspects simultaneously and saves time. A more complete version might therefore be:

All our intentions concerning, among other things, our loving [not loving] and, respectively, hating [not hating] other students, teachers [and accordingly our own teachers], as well as the entire school system and education, and not only these, together with our experiencing all the consequences thereof.

In intentions devoted to professions and work, these intentions concerning loving and hating are particularly important.

Suppose we are accountants. Then the intention could read:

All our intentions concerning, among other things, our loving [not loving] and, respectively, hating [not hating] accounting, other accountants, as well as economics and finance as a whole, and not only these, together with our experiencing all the consequences thereof.

Notice that loving accountants may manifest in many different ways and contexts.

  1. Mr. Zbyszek is in love with Ms. Zosia, who is an accountant.
  2. Someone, as a person of great compassion, loves all accountants and appreciates economics.
  3. Ms. Marysia, as a lesbian, is in love with Ms. Zosia, who is an accountant.
  4. A son loves his mother, who happens to be an accountant.

A similar approach may be applied to themes connected with the soul’s incarnation into the opposite sex or various sexual entanglements.

For example:

All our intentions concerning, among other things, our loving [not loving] and, respectively, hating [not hating] red-haired people, and not only them, together with our experiencing all the consequences thereof.

Such an intention may reveal relationships with someone possessing red hair who harmed us or whom we once loved.

Another example:

All our intentions concerning, among other things, our loving [not loving] and, respectively, hating [not hating] courts, judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, the judicial system, judgment itself, and not only these, together with our experiencing all the consequences thereof.

The contexts here are just as broad as those involving accountants.

Some people genuinely love justice. I once heard of a man who filed so many lawsuits that people joked he had his own courtroom.

Someone else may discover why a bailiff has become interested in them after working through intentions related to loving and hating debt collection and bailiffs.

A woman who worked with affirmations and regression techniques aimed at karmic burdens recalled why a certain man disliked her. They had known each other before; in a previous context, he had been a tax collector serving a ruler.

It is also worth examining whether an intention involving giving love—for example to people suffering from leprosy or cancer—might carry unintended consequences or create associations that should be understood and worked through consciously.


Opublikowano: 20/06/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: Heart Energy and Love.


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