Why the Spiritual Gets No Love

My ultimate goal is to win an Academy Award in heaven, and I believe every one of us is intended to win an Academy Award in heaven.  Each of our journeys is a miracle—a reason for celebration.  Although we all deserve an Academy Award in heaven, we are also meant to love everyone in this earthly existence.  That’s the message I need to resonate with others in this physical realm.  That’s the message that needs to win an Academy Award on Earth.  In other words, my documentary on unconditional love needs to resonate with others to be deemed a success.

On a very positive note, tonight we went to the cinema.  However, we went into shock during the pre-show as the spiritual book trailer advertisement I made appeared unexpectedly on the theatre screen.  The powerful spiritual music and visuals made the entire theater immediately go silent, and it looked more magnificent than I imagined.  I thought the video would be pixelated and the music would be muffled, but it was the opposite.  I have never seen a more beautiful pre-show commercial in that theater than the one I made, and I’m being statistically accurate.  It was stunning.  Although I couldn’t negotiate a price that I could afford to have the ad in the theater, the manager featured it for the entire month on all the screens for free without telling us.  I had wondered why she had disappeared from negotiating a lower fee.  And the ad looked beyond beautiful.  So, now I know I can make a spectacular documentary using just Canva video assets on my low-cost paid plan, although I need to find a low-cost commercial license music platform.

I believe each of us is intended to herald a new world order based on love for all, not divisions or us-versus-them mindsets.  Near-death experiencers see heavenly prophecies of possible outcomes for Earth, some of which involve destruction, war, and devastation, and others involving peace, love, and harmony.  The result of this world depends on each of us.  I believe we all need to arrive at that peaceful, loving, and harmonious place, regardless of outer circumstances, and the way to achieve this is by demonstrating unconditional love for everyone.

I sometimes post on a national news forum.  I often defend our dear Jewish community, particularly our sweet, innocent Canadian Jewish students.  And when I’m combative in my posts, I get lots of likes and sometimes rise to the top of the feed, often one of the top four comments.  However, I prefer to post comments defending our dear Jewish community while sending out a message of unconditional love for everyone.  Still, I don’t know how people would receive such a love message, although I believe God would approve.

Yesterday, however, I decided to post a comment about the need for unconditional love as an ideological model in academia, and I received no likes for my post.  I expressed how higher education needs theories and methodologies based on unconditional love for all versus the victim and oppressor dichotomy.  The lack of love my comment received doesn’t bode well for my documentary either, as the film’s theme is about how higher education should develop ideologies based on love for everyone.  But I need to make the documentary for God, even if the film doesn’t have a wide reception.  However, the ideal goal is to make the film resonate with the masses.  It should be able to win an Academy Award in heaven and one on Earth, too.  Seeing how my book trailer ad made the entire theater go instantly quiet gives me hope that spiritual messaging may have a receptive audience.

One filmmaker said, “Don’t focus on what everyone wants.  Focus on making the movie you want to see.” A scientific researcher once claimed that washing hands could prevent disease, a widely discredited notion.  Thus, he was mocked into oblivion.  Yet, today, his radical view has been widely accepted and normalized.  So, if our spiritual messages don’t resonate today, they might tomorrow.  And I know all of us reading this note will bring many love messages to others, as we have the wisdom.  After all, isn’t loving one another why we even exist?