The film “Lucy” illustrates a transformation where the protagonist experiences a profound dissolution of self, revealing universal awareness. This journey mirrors ancestral memory and spiritual awakening across lifetimes, suggesting that true liberation stems from surrender rather than cognitive achievement. It emphasizes the inherent connection between the individual soul and Oneness.
Tag: contemplative spirituality
The One Who Sits in the Ash
Introduction There is a moment in the life of certain seekers when the path they expected to walk simply turns. … More
When the Fog Is Called Faith
The essay reflects on personal experiences within a spiritual community, exposing the illusion of organized belief systems that prioritize adherence over authenticity. It highlights the human longing for belonging and meaning, emphasizing that true awakening transcends institutional teachings. By recognizing our shared vulnerabilities, liberation arises from embracing our inherent nature of love, moving beyond conditioned identities.
The One Who Has Always Been Watching
The text explores the concept of the Witness, a faculty of pure awareness present in all experiences. It draws on spiritual traditions, describing the Witness as something distinct from the personality, observing life without interference. The process of recognizing the Witness involves a gradual letting go of ego, leading to a realization of non-duality, where the individual perceives reality clearly. Ultimately, the Witness connects the soul to its true nature, emphasizing presence and awareness without attachment.
The Dignity of the Common Soul
The ordinary was never small. Beneath the myth of specialness lies a ground threaded through with Source — not as reward for exceptional souls, but as the very substance of all souls. This is not about settling. It is about finally seeing.
The Witness at the Bottom of the World
Something in you is reading these words. Something else is watching you read them. The great contemplative traditions all arrived at the same recognition: consciousness is not produced by the world — the world arises within consciousness. The Vedic Yuga cycle tells us we have descended through ages of increasing density into the maximum contraction of Kali Yuga. But the descent was not a mistake. It was involution — consciousness forgetting itself so it might remember from the inside. The Witness does not awaken in comfort. It awakens at the nadir, when every strategy of the ego has exhausted itself. Which means this moment may be precisely what the cycle has been moving toward all along.