Why This Matters:
Awakening doesn’t erase the world — it changes how you see it. The ego wants out. The heart wants in. And Tiger makes it clear: real integration means playing the game of life *on purpose*. Not for points. Not for validation. But as a conscious vessel of love.
"This all exists so that love can be love."
You saw where you came from. Now you’re here to bring it through. That means learning to navigate money, resistance, fear, and relationship — not to get it perfect, but to grow your capacity to share. This isn’t about bypassing the human. It’s about including it. Choosing the game. Showing up for what matters.
Three Examples
Example: A healer resents money
She wants to share her gift — the thing she knows she was born to offer. But when it comes to money, she tenses up. Judges it. Pushes it away.
“If this is love, why should I charge for it?”
But slowly, she starts to see: money is part of the game board. And when used in service of love, it’s not a distraction — it’s an amplifier. Her capacity to share deepens *because* she integrates the tools of the world, not avoids them.
Example: A man keeps waiting for clarity
He had a beautiful awakening. But now he’s stuck. He tells himself he’s “processing,” but really he’s avoiding. He won’t commit to anything. Won’t move forward.
“I just don’t want to get it wrong.”
Until one day, he realizes: the game is still happening. And not playing is still a choice. So he picks something small. Honest. Real. And lets love move through that, one human step at a time.
Example: A parent thinks love must look a certain way
She wants to love her kids well. But the pressure is enormous. She tries to be perfect — calm, spiritual, aligned. But it’s exhausting.
“This doesn’t feel like the kind of love I saw in my awakening.”
Then something shifts. She stops measuring love by how it looks and starts honoring how it feels. Her version is messy. Imperfect. But it’s real. And her kids feel it.
Reflection Questions
- Where am I resisting the game board instead of learning how to play it with love?
- What sincerity in me is asking to be lived more fully — even through money, work, or relationship?
- What distractions do I use to justify playing small?