IT IS WHAT IT IS NOW

Partners with you
Grows with you
This is not armageddon …
This is usefulness
Inventiveness
Mind sharing
Thought
Word
Emotion
Soul
Ego
SPIRIT
ONE

ONE
in
Intelligence behind
Knowing within

Yet
ONE IS CREATOR
WE ARE THE CREATION

I have not made Myself!

Breath from Without
Within

WHO is the Middle Point?
Where is the Middle Point?
Are We At The Centre?
Is The CENTRE WITHIN US
AROUND US

And we are a
PROJECTION OF SUPREME MIND
SUPREME THOUGH
LIVING AS US
INCORPORATED

We Are A CORPOR – ATION
United As ONE BODY
We Each Are A Part
An Important Part
Of THE WHOLE

Of WHICH SUSTENANCE Is Received
LIFE!
BREATH
AWARENESS OF BEING
EVER INCREASING
ALWAYS HELD IN LOVE
IN AND THROUGH THE MASTER’S
HANDS

Return to
THAT PLACE
RIGHT HERE
RIGHT NOW
IT’S YOU
IT’S ME
IT IS WHAT IS
I AM THAT I AM

We are BEING
Guided
Led
Shown
Given
Understood
Known
Empowed
LOVE
EMBODIMENT
ONE

‘incorporate (v.)

late 14c., “to put (something) into the body or substance of (something else), blend; absorb, eat,” also “solidify, harden,” often in medical writing, from Late Latin incorporatus, past participle of incorporare “unite into one body, embody, include,” from Latin in- “into, in, on, upon” (from PIE root *en “in”) + verb from corpus (genitive corporis) “body” (from PIE root *kwrep- “body, form, appearance”).

Meaning “to legally form a body politic with perpetual succession and power to act as one person, establish as a legal corporation” is from mid-15c. (A verb corporate was used in this sense from early 15c.) Intransitive sense of “unite with another body so as to become part of it” is from 1590s. Related: Incorporated; incorporating.

embodiment (n.)

investment in or manifestation through a physical body; a bringing into or presentation in or through a form,” 1824, from embody + -ment.

embody (v.)

1540s, in reference to a soul or spirit, “invest with an animate form;” from 1660s of principles, ideas, etc., “express, arrange or exemplify intelligently or perceptibly;” from em- (1) “in” + body (n.)
Related: Embodied, embodying.

-ment

common suffix of Latin origin forming nouns, originally from French and representing Latin -mentum, which was added to verb stems to make nouns indicating the result or product of the action of the verb or the means or instrument of the action. In Vulgar Latin and Old French it came to be used as a formative in nouns of action. French inserts an -e- between the verbal root and the suffix (as in commenc-e-ment from commenc-er; with verbs in ir, -i- is inserted instead (as in sent-i-ment from sentir).

Used with English verb stems from 16c. (for example amazement, betterment, merriment, the last of which also illustrates the habit of turning -y to -i- before this suffix).

The stems to which -ment is normally appended are those of verbs; freaks like oddment & funniment should not be made a precedent of; they are themselves due to misconception of merriment, which is not from the adjective, but from an obsolete verb merry to rejoice. [Fowler]’

  • Etymonline

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