12-05-2012, 01:35 PM
It is EXTREMELY unwise to stop these big multi-stage programs in the middle. That's why you need to be careful when you start them that you can and will finish them. They do things to get you where you are going that require them to push you off balance in certain ways which forces a change. Each stage balances the one before it, and the last stage is the one that brings you back to balance, so to speak.
Stopping in the middle can cause issues, especially if you are unfinished with a lesson or lessons being introduce, which become faulty directions and programming if they are left unbalanced by the next stage and so on. There is a good reason why there are six stages and not just one.
Finish what you start.
Stopping in the middle can cause issues, especially if you are unfinished with a lesson or lessons being introduce, which become faulty directions and programming if they are left unbalanced by the next stage and so on. There is a good reason why there are six stages and not just one.
Finish what you start.
Subliminal Audio Specialist & Administrator
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!