Love Everyone
At our highest place of frequency, vibration, and consciousness—when a human being’s spirits are most elevated, whatever language you want to use for it—whether you call it heaven on earth, moksha, nirvana, connection with the universe, connection with all, connection with God, Wholiness, or Christ Consciousness—one of the truths that becomes clear in these elevated, ideal states of consciousness is that you are being called to love everyone.
To love everyone.
It is a very simple statement, but it is incredibly powerful. And it is definitely not impossible. In fact, lots of people do it, because they understand more deeply what it actually means to love everyone—what it looks like and what it feels like.
It is also important, and very uplifting, to know that there are populations of humans who, throughout the course of humanity and in every second of every day, are projecting love for everyone. There are individuals and groups all around the world who are praying, meditating, manifesting, affirming, imagining, and visualizing love for all of humanity. People you don’t even know—people you have never met—are praying for you and loving you right now.
This is a beautiful part of humanity. Projecting a real, honest love for all of humanity (and even all life on earth) is a blissfully happy, content, deeply connected, and joyful place to ascend to mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. It can happen. It does happen. It is happening all the time. Individuals and groups are projecting an honest love for all of humanity.
Before we can truly understand what it means to love everyone, we first have to understand what it actually means to love something.
My favorite way to understand love is linguistically. A lot of human beings—including myself—think about love many times every day. We say or think about the many different things we love often. And most of that is valid and meaningful, except when we are obviously being sarcastic. When we say things like, “Oh, I looove sitting in traffic,” or “I looove when my food falls on the floor,” we are using the word love, but we don’t mean it.
That kind of sarcasm is okay occasionally, but we shouldn’t do it all the time. Words matter. Language matters. We choose every thought and emotion we have. And when we can, we should try to be positive and very intentional with our thoughts, words, and actions.
If I look at all the things I have said or thought that I love just in the past few months, the list is enormous. I love my family—my kids, my wife, my parents, my extended family. I love my friends and friendship in general. I love dogs and cats. I love trees and flowers. I love poetry and comedy and theatre and so many types of art. I love books and literature. I love sports, athletics, and competition. I love science and spirituality. Music and dance. The shape, texture, and colors of the world.
It is a massive spectrum of things that I say out loud that I love or have thoughts of love about. (Side note: when it comes to other human beings, if you think it, you probably should say it. You should articulate that love in some way. Let it fly. It’s never wrong to express an honest love about another human. The world needs as much of that as you can give.)
So what does it actually mean to love something, considering how wide this spectrum is?
All love is, is having a passion for something. That’s it. To love something is to have an honest, positive energy and feeling toward it—to have a passion for it.
With that understanding of love, the goal at the highest levels of spiritual, vibrational, and energetic conscious ascension is to love everyone.
And half of this goal is actually very easy for most people to understand.
Think about any human being you see who isn’t hurting anyone. They’re just there. A kid playing. An adult sitting and smiling. Someone working on something. Someone just living their life. It is easy to imagine being in a place where you can have a passion for that—just human existence itself.
Of course, it’s especially easy when it’s someone you know and love—when they’re doing something funny or adorable or kind or generous or touching. But even in neutral situations, when people are just existing and not harming anyone, it’s easy to imagine yourself being passionate about that human being and loving them.
You can imagine yourself elevating your consciousness to a place of happiness and loving people simply for being alive, even if they are not great or amazing or close to you. That is half of the work of loving everyone.
The other half is the difficult part.
The vast majority of humanity is good. But oftentimes—myself included—we have moments when we are not doing good. Evil creeps in. Fear creeps in. Sometimes in mild ways. Sometimes in more serious ways. We all have fear-based thoughts, feelings, and actions that are unkind, mildly violent, mildly greedy, or mildly hateful.
And then there are higher levels of intensity—moderate, severe, and extreme systems of violence, corruption, hatred, and greed that cause immense human suffering.
It is very difficult to instinctually love people who engage with the world like that. How do you have a passion for someone who is doing real harm? How do you love something so evil?
You don’t.
And you don’t have to. No one should ask you to. Loving any type or intensity of evil is not love—it is a corruption of love. Evil is always wrong.
So whether we are talking about mild evil, like a schoolyard bully, or much more severe forms of harm, the question becomes: how do you love someone without loving the evil they are engaging in?
What you love—what you have a passion for—is everyone’s ability to and potential to consciously ascend. Their ability to elevate spiritually. Their potential to rise to a higher frequency and level of consciousness.
This is very intuitive with children. If a child is being a bully, you stop the behavior—but you also recognize that it is a confused, scared, developing human being. You don’t give up on them. You are passionate about their potential to grow, evolve, and improve.
The same is true for every single human being. Including you.
Every human being moves in and out of lower and higher vibrational states. We all experience fear, anger, and confusion. AND we all experience moments where something happens—a thought, a feeling, a choice, an experience, a memory, a song, a book, a call, a text—that lifts us into a higher vibrational state of being.
So when someone is engaging in evil at any level of intensity, what you love is not the evil itself, but the potential within them to evolve beyond it.
And this gives you a VERY CLEAR PATH for how to interact with them.
Remember…Hatred cannot drive out hatred. Only love can do that. Darkness cannot drive out darkness. Only light can do that.
That wisdom from Martin Luther King Jr. is not symbolic—it is practical. When you encounter evil, you do not respond with more hatred, anger, fear, greed, or violence. You do not match darkness with darkness.
You bring light.
You bring encouragement, care, accountability, support, love, laughter, creativity, gentleness, justice, wisdom, empathy, compassion, intelligence, education, or any other form of positivity. You work—often in innovative and difficult ways—to help people evolve beyond harmful belief systems and behaviors. You show them the way. You give them the tools. As much as you possibly can- never let encountering evil of any kind dim your light, lower your vibration, or pull you down. Shine even brighter, raise your consciousness even higher, and pull others up.
This is how you love everyone.
It is easy when people are being good, neutral, kind, or loving. It is much harder when people are suffering from and trapped within evil belief systems.
But loving everyone means loving the potential within every human being to ascend—and choosing to help bring that potential into reality.
You don’t have to and SHOULD never love or be passionate about anything you believe is negative or evil. You just have to love the potential that every human has to spiritually ascend above and beyond evil.
Thank you for reading,
AVK