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===Group: [[11:11 Progress Group]]===
 
===Group: [[11:11 Progress Group]]===
 
==Facilitators==
 
==Facilitators==
===Teacher: [[Beloved One|Unknown]]===
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===Teacher: [[Unknown|Beloved One]]===
 
===TR: [[Lytske]]===
 
===TR: [[Lytske]]===
 
==Session==
 
==Session==
 
===Opening===
 
===Opening===
 
The Beloved One: “There is some hesitation on your part to receive My words on timidity, but I tell you that this subject, too, is quite timely.   
 
The Beloved One: “There is some hesitation on your part to receive My words on timidity, but I tell you that this subject, too, is quite timely.   
===Lesson===ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddv
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===Lesson===
 
There are too many of your brothers and sisters who hide their lights under a bushel, because for some reason they are afraid to allow their brilliance to be seen.  This can have several causes and the most obvious one is, of course, left over from early childhood when children were allowed to be seen, but not heard.  At one time, and frequently even now, the opinion of a child did not count for much, and yet often the greatest truth expressed did proceed from the mouth of a child.  Children are unbiased, and see truth as it exists in that moment, yet truth might well escape the attention and scrutiny of the adult.  An observant child sees much, but learns early that it is not always safe to express an opinion on what it sees and hears.  Well-meaning but thoughtless adults often forget their early childhood struggles when they wished ‘to be in a place that mattered,’ and where they were appreciated.
 
There are too many of your brothers and sisters who hide their lights under a bushel, because for some reason they are afraid to allow their brilliance to be seen.  This can have several causes and the most obvious one is, of course, left over from early childhood when children were allowed to be seen, but not heard.  At one time, and frequently even now, the opinion of a child did not count for much, and yet often the greatest truth expressed did proceed from the mouth of a child.  Children are unbiased, and see truth as it exists in that moment, yet truth might well escape the attention and scrutiny of the adult.  An observant child sees much, but learns early that it is not always safe to express an opinion on what it sees and hears.  Well-meaning but thoughtless adults often forget their early childhood struggles when they wished ‘to be in a place that mattered,’ and where they were appreciated.
 
   
 
   

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