Recognize Soul Contracts: Wherever you Go, There You Are
Let me confirm that we are all destined to meet whomever we meet. Be it short-term or long-term. But have you ever asked yourself why you keep meeting the same type of a person over and over?
Ever met someone who seemed so familiar to you that you thought you'd known him or her before? Or maybe you just met someone who reminded you so much of someone else. When such uncanny occurrences happen, it's more than just having sun signs in common or coincidence.
It is an encounter with someone from your soul family or group.
Someone who is part of our soul family is a soul who we've contracted with and are destined to have interactions with in your current life or another- regardless of free will. For example, you meet a person when you live in New York who you have a soul contract with, but don't complete because the relationship becomes too tumultuous. You choose, with your free will, to start a new life away from this individual and deliberately relocate to, perhaps, Wisconsin. If you did not fulfill your soul contract, a splinter of the soul you contracted with will meet you again in Wisconsin. This new person will feel or be similar to the person you left behind in New York. Though your conscious self feels that you've cut the cords from the New York relationship, your abrupt leave-taking caused the contract to remain unfulfilled.
You can understand the concept by drawing a connection to a giant queen bee (the larger, whole soul entity) which is comprised of many tiny bees (soul shards) that maintain a similar nature to the queen because they are fragmented from her. This queen sends parts of herself to complete a mission for the hive. Each bee sets off to complete the mission until it is successful. When the mission is complete, the tiny bees return to the hive.
Until you complete the contract, that person or versions of that person will continue to surface. Termination terms for the contract's closure were dictated prior to your incarnation. It may take this life or many lifetimes to fulfill a contract. Termination terms may be easy or disastrous.
So the next time you encounter one of these situations, you may consider asking yourself: Is this a person I have a significant contract with? What do I need to learn from this encounter? What do I need to do to fulfill this soul contract?
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