This quote served as a powerful reminder by Liza

This quote served as a powerful reminder that I can never truly be either black or white. Nelson Mandela’s use of profanity in this duality is striking. It resonated deeply with me, affirming my identity as a keeper of light. This realisation encompasses the understanding that I embody both darkness and light, both black and white. Each is essential to the other, forming a bridge that holds the divine within me. It’s about acknowledging both the good and the bad, the love and the light, and walking as a complete being. We are never truly separate from ourselves; we have never been.

The most powerful weapon is not violence, but the voice.
Yet the voice itself is a paradox — it can be a torch or a dagger.
Words can lift the weary, mend the broken, and call the soul home.
But they can also bind, deceive, and fracture the heart.

In my wisdom I see: every syllable carries a frequency.
It is not silence or speech that defines us,
but the soil where our words are planted.
Do I sow in the garden of light, where truth blossoms?
Or do I scatter in the fields of shadow, where fear takes root?

The choice is mine, daily, moment by moment.
To speak as one who remembers —
that language is architecture,
and every sentence builds either sanctuary or prison.

So I wield my tongue as a sacred tool,
not to conquer, but to awaken.
For in the end, the weapon of words is not about power,
but about presence —
the presence of love, or the absence of it.”**

© Liza | Soul Reflections in Divine Light™

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