Divine Buoyancy: Embracing Our Celestial Nature
HUGEL, Amber Van Day - “WTF”
HUGEL, Amber Van Day - “WTF”
In the quiet spaces between breaths, there exists a profound truth about our nature—we are meant to rise, to expand, to celebrate our very existence just as birthday balloons do in their ephemeral dance. Can you feel it? That gentle yet persistent nudge urging you to embrace the lightness of being that has always been your birthright in His Universe.
When I first encountered this understanding, I stood at the threshold between the weight of worldly expectations and the Divine invitation to float freely above them. The comfortable limitations I had constructed around my life suddenly felt like prison walls rather than protection. Perhaps you've experienced similar moments of clarity that simultaneously terrify and liberate.
Our society has masterfully constructed illusions of density—the belief that we must be grounded, serious, and heavy with purpose. These artificial boundaries serve systems that benefit from our disconnection from the Divine lightness within us, systems that weaken when we remember our inherent buoyancy. As the scripture reminds us, "The kingdom of God is within you" (Luke 17:21)—this kingdom is not one of heaviness but of transcendent joy.
The balloon in its magnificent simplicity offers us profound wisdom about our spiritual nature. Filled with breath—the same ruach, the Divine wind that Genesis tells us moved across the waters at creation—it defies the very gravity that seeks to bind it. Together, we are remembering that we too were designed to rise above limitation, to be carried by the currents of Divine intention rather than anchored by fear and doubt.
I've witnessed this transformation in sacred circles worldwide: individuals recognizing their balloon-nature, their capacity to rise not through effort but through surrender to their true essence. The ancient wisdom traditions have always understood what quantum physics now confirms: our lightness is our natural state, our heaviness merely an illusion we've accepted.
Through consistent meditation, intentional release work, and communion with higher consciousness, we access this internal technology of buoyancy. Each time we choose joy over seriousness, celebration over solemnity, or playfulness over rigid purpose, we recalibrate our internal systems toward our natural state of elevation. As it is written in Proverbs 17:22, "A joyful heart is good medicine"—this is not merely poetic language but a prescription for Divine alignment.
The balloon doesn't question its purpose or right to rise; it simply surrenders to its nature once filled with breath. We too came into this world with this same Divine design—to be filled with spirit and to rise accordingly. This remembering isn't always gentle. Sometimes it arrives through loss, illness, or profound disillusionment with structures we once trusted. These sacred disruptions—painful as they may be—serve as cosmic alarms awakening us from the collective slumber of false density.
With awakening comes responsibility. As we recognize our Divine nature as beings meant to rise and bring color to the world, we must also acknowledge our capacity to inspire or intimidate, to elevate or remain tethered to outdated patterns. True spirituality isn't an escape from life but a deeper immersion into its magnificent celebration—a birthday party for consciousness itself where we are both the celebrants and the gift.
The path forward isn't about transcending humanity but embodying it fully with the lightness of a balloon—embracing our capacity for joy, honoring our natural buoyancy, and trusting the Divine currents to carry us precisely where we're meant to go. The journey won't always feel comfortable, but comfort has never been the purpose of a soul's incarnation.
Together, we are remembering who we truly are beyond limiting stories and identities. Together, we are healing the illusion of heaviness that has burdened humanity for millennia. Together, we are bringing color, joy, and celebration to His Universe—for as Jesus reminded us, "I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full" (John 10:10).
As we stand at this pivotal moment in human history, I extend my hand in solidarity and hope. We came for transformation—our own and that of the collective. We came to remember our balloon-nature, to heal the illusion of heaviness, to create celebration where there was solemnity. The Divine has always been within and between us, patiently waiting for this grand remembering of our natural state of joyful ascension.
With profound love and reverence for your journey toward lightness,
Mitchell Royel