Why We Need Anchors

anchor Jennifer Hoffman – The purpose of an anchor on a boat is to prevent it from drifting away with the current. If sailors didn’t use anchors, their boats would drift aimlessly around the harbor or, if they caught the right current, out to sea. Anchors serve a useful purpose, they help control a boat’s movement when the captain wants it to stay in one place so the boat can be resupplied, fixed, cleaned or just because they need a break. And when it’s time to move on, the anchor is brought on board and the boat is free to go. Anchors are useful when they’re needed, a nuisance when they aren’t, and the trick is to know when they’re necessary, and when it’s time to ‘weigh anchor’ and bring it back on the boat because it’s time to go.

If energy always moved forward we would never have a chance to reconstsider our options and decide whether the direction we’re moving in is the right one for us, make course corrections, or take time to rest. And as we expand from 3D polarity to 5D duality, from the density of 3D to the creative expansion of 5D, our 3D timelines lack the expansion capability to handle the influx of these energies. The 5D energy needs much more room than 3D provides, so we get stopped in our tracks, anchors are put down, so we can release some ballast and make room for the energy.

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