The Imitation Of Knowing
What make us feel good? It is when we reverse not knowing into knowing. The relief is the joy of knowing that we’ve solved a problem. Something that we’d always felt but have never resolved has been clarified. In the past, all we were doing was believing what others say, which is an imitation of knowing. When we realise something, however, everythingfalls into place.
Then the problem arises – Who can we tell? Who will listen? In the eyes of those who don’t want the boat rocked, have we just become a whistle blower? Is this why free speech is curtailed? In any ‘spiritual’ set up, free speech is frowned upon, as we’re supposed to fall in line. We may do that to feel good, but we have no genuine experience β and that’s what makes us reactive.
Genuinely feeling good is breaking out of a code of belief that’s indoctrinated us by programming the sub-conscious to believing in a self (‘sub-conscious’ is a misnomer, as it’s programming the brain, as in product recognition before we know it).
Paradoxically, the Belief Code was developed to identify and release faulty beliefs about ourself, which contribute to difficulties with emotional wounds, physical discomforts, relationships, self-sabotage β¦ causing us to feel not good enough. In life, no matter what we try, it feels like there is an invisible block preventing us from achieving it. The Belief Code was created for us to feel good about ourself β but it’s just another belief.
It is meditation that breaks all codes,
releasing us from that which prevents us
from discovering, transforming and igniting our true reality.
Consciousness is no longer an smouldering ember,
but a brilliant, splendid light. π
The real thing!