I AM That? Yes, That. Which "That"? All of it. Neale Donald Walsch (best selling author of "Conversations with God") was studying with a master and the master said, "Go about your day and whatever you see, say 'I am that.'" So Neale did. He was walking with a friend and Neale was saying, "I am that. I am that." She turned to him and asked, "What are you doing?" And he replied, "I am that (pointing at what he was looking at)." She said, "No, you're not." To which he replied, "Yes, I am that. (Then with emphasis) I AM That, I AM." Then he realized these words were the Divine name that Moses was told at the burning bush. In "The Moses Code" by James Twyman, it is shown that there is actually a comma in the name "I Am That I Am" and is actually "I Am That, I Am". In the written Torah, there are no vowels and no punctuation marks -- no commas. But how can the Torah be understood without those symbols? It is understood in conjunction with the oral Torah. So you see, "That" is the Divine, as a drop of water is the ocean. And being the ocean, each drop can look at any other drop and say, "I am that". We, and everything, are connected in this way. We are the same Ocean.
For today, I remember that I AM That. I AM.