ISBN-13: 9780615624624 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 272 str.
With a touch of humor, Tommy Knestrick openly shares his life's journey of difficulties, ego habits, and successes in creating with the power of love. He also shares his journey's five shifts in consciousness, to create love in a world filled with increasing conflicts, greed, economic insecurities and unhappiness. He believes there is a major shift in consciousness leading to an age of love rather than to the world's ending. All we need is for more and more people to choose to live with love in their daily lives. Living with love rejuvenates personal relationships, creates love for oneself, gives life meaning and purpose, provides abundance, and brings solutions for life's difficulties. A co-creative partnership with the Divine where good-for-All intentions and actions are guided with wisdom and love consciously creates power to direct one's destiny. Love adds higher vibrations of harmony not only to a person's life but also to the world's consciousness. By changing oneself, one changes the world. Just commit to thirty seconds a day and ask the Divine, What small thing can I do today to be more loving? These accumulated small actions guided by a higher wisdom will empower changes as well as reduce the conflicting and polarizing consciousness of today's relationships, families, communities, and nations. Co-creating and oneness-creating are the ways for change in the twenty-first century. Giving a gift of love to the world helps shift it from the mess we're in to create the Love Age. When a person creates with love, it raises vibrations and contributes to world peace, harmony, freedom, and happiness. World change begins first with each individual filling his or her own life with love. The author currently has no religious affiliation and shares his personal journey integrating Eastern and Christian spirituality with collaborative scientific evidence. He retired from multiple careers as a social researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, sociology professor at Westminster College, and computer systems analyst with the Space Shuttle program and the State of California.