Creating the Sublime

The world grows sublime when we approach our hobbies with hearts filled with love. The lights in our souls brighten. The spaces we occupy develop a warmer hue. The music we listen to soothes us like never before. The gym equipment in the bedroom looks extra inviting. All this love paves the way for “downloads” from God, where we create beauty at a higher frequency. This sounds like a new-age philosophy, and it is, but it applies to all religions and people.

I learned how to heal ourselves in a near-death experience story on Heather Tesch’s YouTube channel. The healing method involves realigning with unconditional love by taking the negatives, thanking them for their lessons, and then realigning them with love. We all have shortcomings of humans, but we are spiritual beings, and spiritual beings in their highest form are unconditional love. Nothing can truly hurt the soul, as its essence is pure love. Things can harm us physically, but not the soul. The near-death experience survivor said that for humans to evolve, we must teach others to embrace their authentic selves: love. And by releasing everything, good or bad, to pure love, we develop an enlightened state of self-expression and, therefore, a higher creativity. At least, that’s how I’ve come to experience the creative process.

A loved one created a song with over 500 views in two days, and I can’t stop listening to it. It’s so beautiful. It’s about God, now nearing 700 views a day later. I made the video for it using AI, and the song and video tug my heart. And when the images of Jesus in the video appear, I feel elated and cry out the Lord’s name. I also did a video recreation of my friend’s near-death experience using AI video. She saw both Christian and Islamic faiths in heaven; moreover, she saw all religions in heaven. So, if God is in all religions, all faiths must be premised on universal, unconditional love, as overwhelmingly beautiful love permeates the souls of near-death experiencer survivors during their visits to heaven.

My music videos recently took a day and a half to complete; now they take less than three hours, and the last one I made looks spectacular. I can’t stop listening to the gorgeous song, too. A radio station DJ asked to play the music, but I phoned the radio station. The station rep indicated that the DJ isn’t staff and is likely a scam artist. So, I’m uploading the songs to a service called Mediabase and SOCAN for royalty tracking and payments, and then I’ll promote the song to radio stations. When we become entrenched in a hobby or vocation, we experience unique circumstances, heartaches, wounds, triumphs, and joys. As a tip, making spiritual music videos feels like the soul elevating into an eternal sunrise.

The Distrokid song distributor offers a website plan on its partner site, enabling the sale of print-on-demand merchandise, so I’m jumping on this opportunity as soon as possible. However, I need to gain employment to do this properly because finances are tight. I highly recommend full-time managerial careers as opportunities happen at hyperspeed when we can finance them. Personally, I recommend complementing our degrees with an MBA.

If I get the tax credit or full-time employment soon, I’d like to gift music lessons to my loved one. That would be the icing on the musical note. I am confident my loved one will become famous for his music. God is behind his music, which makes his potential infinite. That’s because the eternal is spiritual, whereas the physical and material are finite.

So, surrender our creative projects to God, regardless of our religion. Give Him our all: sacrifice our time and money to create unconditional love for everyone. Even if we don’t believe in a God, we can still turn our creative dreams into acts of love. Everyone is a soul, and every soul is love. By expressing love for everyone, we create the sublime. We are the sublime.