This transmission is about the body as a Light vessel — the “machine” of your body, so to speak. This includes your physical as well as spiritual/energy bodies. They all interconnect as one (and One).
Light Language Keynote #28
Realize, first, that your body/vessel is much, much more than anything that we would recognize as a machine. It has its own intelligence and abilities that exceed our current understanding. The word is simply used here as an analogy to help give us a framework for learning.
That being said, the Light Language is working with us on keeping our “machine” going strong and healthy. It’s bringing your awareness to new information about your vessel and guiding various types of “cleaning” for your energy bodies. The idea for the latter would be similar to a tune-up for your car or going to the car wash to remove the mud and debris that have accumulated from the road. It cleanses the bodies, brings them into alignment, and optimizes them to work together in their full function.
Going further, this Light Language is a bridge to more knowledge about the bodies and their relationships with one another. My Light Team flashed several formulas in my vision. It was sort of like seeing a set of complex math or physics equations. I was getting that these speak to the interconnectedness of the bodies: their properties and how they interrelate, their layering and combining as a concerted operation. The word I got for it was “harmony”, as in, harmony resulting from various combined “parts”. It creates the vessel or Light Body.
My Light Team wants us to know, our vessel shines Light like a torch with its own freedom to blaze.
Another way to say it would be, our vessel operates in its own personal sovereignty and shines as an example to others, reminding them them that they, too, possess this sovereignty. Many hearts spin together, fueling each other on. (Source => Fuel => Fire => Light)
Words that they shared:
“Shine your vessel, let it spin. Open up and let Light in.”
They gave these to me as a sort of joke — to bring in humor and help us remember to smile, laugh, and have fun as we do this and as we engage with the transmission. It’s a reminder that our spiritual work doesn’t always have to be so solemn or serious.