Erik on Abortions

I hope everyone had a wonderful weekend. My second eldest, Michelle, had a great birthday with sunshine both Saturday and Sunday. Rune raced up in Decatur, Texas, barely dodging tornadic T-storms, and now, I’m nestled up inside with my laptop sharing Erik with you fine folks while listening to the heavy rain punctuated by angry thunder. Enjoy.

Me: Is Erik easy to channel?

Jamie: He is, yes, but once I call in all the other family members and guides in at once, then it gets a little slow.

Me: Good, I’m so glad he’s easy for you! I guess because he’s so chatty and low key.

Jamie: He, um, did a reading with—

(pause)

Jamie (to Erik): I don’t think that’s her name.

(pause)

Jamie (giggle to Erik): No!

Jamie (to me): There was a woman we spoke to today, and it was PHENOMENAL! It was like Mister GURU Erik.

Me: Aw, Erik!

Jamie: We stopped several times and said, you know, we never heard it put that way, and that really needs to be taught. L**** is her name, not Linda like Erik said.

Me: Is she from the Channeling Erik family?

Jamie: I think so.

(pause)

Jamie: Erik says yes.

Me: Oh, Erik, you’re the bomb. You guys make a good team. I’m so proud of you! 

(Pause)

What is the lesson behind abortion?

Jamie: Erik slaps his hand down on his knee.

Erik: I know this one!

Me: Oh, good!

Jamie: Oh, like you’re being quizzed?

Erik: No, no, no! It’s about personal boundaries. It’s about saying, “This is my body; this is what I need for my life.”

Me: On whose part, the mother or the child?

Erik: The mother, the mom. It will be the mother’s lesson. Trust me, 99.9% of the time, at that conception, the spirit that is waiting to come in to the mother’s body—if they know that that life is ending in abortion, they’re not going to work so hard to be attached to those cells, to be attached to that baby growing. They will work more with the mother in helping her to let go. There’s no pain or hurt of suffering involved with an abortion for a child. If a child is coming in, and they want to feel that pain and hurt and suffering, normally this is what happens with a miscarriage, because this is the child’s lesson.

Me: Mm hm.

Erik: Mostly. We’re speaking in general terms here. The child is—

Jamie (frustrated): Back up, back up, back up!

I giggle.

Erik: —discovering what it is to not have a full completion or connection to their mother, to their life so that the environment that they’re in is self-sabotaged. It’s supposed to feed them and take care of them, but yet it’s destroying them. So, it’s mostly the child’s lesson, not the mother’s miscarriage.

Me: Oh, okay.

Erik: But if it’s an abortion, generally speaking, it’s the mother’s lesson of boundaries.

Me: Boundaries like, “Hey, you’re not supposed to be here; get out”?

Erik: Yes, like this, um, it’s not about making a mistake or anything. It’s about, “This is my life; these are my decisions.”

Me: Oh, I see.

Erik: You know, having rights. 

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

About Author

Elisa Medhus


%d bloggers like this: