Skip to content

Tag: self-discovery

Amplifying the Light

In this discourse, we explore the transformative ideas of Jacob Israel Liberman, whose work on vision and consciousness offers a radical shift in how we perceive the world and ourselves. His personal journey — marked by a profound awakening in 1976 — challenges our conventional understanding of sight, inviting us to see beyond the physical and into the essence of our being. Through this exploration, we delve into how vision is not merely a sensory process, but a holistic experience that connects mind, body, and light.

Spiritual Frameworks as Control Systems

It’s easy to get lost in the labyrinth of ideas — past lives, reincarnation, karma, hypnosis, and the nature of reality itself. We’ve been told that we are bound by cycles, debts, and lessons, yet the more one examines these frameworks, the more they start to resemble the same old control mechanisms dressed up in spiritual language. If we are fragments of an infinite source, why would that source impose rigid, Earth-centric laws of punishment and reward? Perhaps the deeper truth lies beyond the narratives we’ve inherited — beyond the neatly packaged stories that keep us tethered to a cycle we never agreed to. Maybe the real journey isn’t about atoning for imagined past sins, but about breaking free from the illusion that we were ever bound at all.

Losing Yourself to Find Yourself

Self-discovery is rarely a straightforward journey. It’s a process of shedding, unraveling, and stepping into the unknown. We often fear losing ourselves, yet in that very loss, we create space for something deeper, something truer to emerge. This piece explores the paradox of letting go — how embracing uncertainty and releasing what no longer serves us can lead to a more authentic, aligned way of being.

Soul, Spirit, and Purpose, Part II: Soul

What if the soul is not here to grow, evolve, or mature, as so many believe? What if it is already whole – a timeless archive, a bridge between Spirit and Source, carrying us through the cycles of human experience not to transform itself, but to help us remember who and what we truly are? Perhaps the notion of an evolving soul is not a truth but a distortion – a veil that obscures the deeper purpose of our existence in this fleeting earthly realm.