Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

55 contributions to Spiritual Rebels
There is no God outside of you that could be found, approached, or worshipped
As long as one assumes that God is something separate, something “out there”, one remains within separation. Prayer, devotion, asking for help or grace all presuppose this division. This statement is a worldview articulated centuries ago by Prakashananda Saraswati, an Indian philosopher and teacher who most likely lived in the 15th or early 16th century. I recently came across his perspective and spent some time engaging with it more deeply. I want to share a short overview here as a possible point of reflection. Prakashananda belonged to the Advaita Vedanta tradition. Unlike devotional or religious movements, this tradition is not concerned with belief systems, rituals, or the worship of a personal God. Its focus lies elsewhere, on the question of what is ultimately real. According to Prakashananda, there is only one reality. This reality is not a being, not a creator figure, not a higher entity standing apart from the world. In Indian philosophy it is often called Brahman, but the name is secondary. It can just as well be described as fundamental being, absolute consciousness, or the underlying principle from which everything arises. What matters is this: it is not separate from us. From this perspective, everything we normally call “the world” has no independent existence of its own. Bodies, thoughts, emotions, objects, nature, time and space all exist and function, but they do not stand on their own. They are appearances, expressions, or objectifications of this one underlying reality. The same applies to the human being. What we usually experience as “I”, personality, biography, thoughts, emotions, belongs to the level of appearance. The true self, according to Prakashananda, is not individual. It is identical with the reality that underlies everything. In classical terms this is expressed as Atman is Brahman. In simple language: what you are at your core is not separate from the foundation of the world. This is where the initial statement becomes clearer. If reality is one and undivided, then the idea of a God outside of oneself becomes problematic. As long as God is imagined as something external, something to be reached, approached, or addressed, separation is already assumed. Prayer, devotion, worship, and the hope for grace may offer emotional comfort or structure, but they operate entirely within this framework of division.
There is no God outside of you that could be found, approached, or worshipped
1 like • 11d
@Erhard H. There are over 8 billion people in the world, each with their “own worldview”, and most of them are convinced that their “own worldview” is the right one. In the end, I guess we will have to fuck around and find out. If we are lucky, we might figure it out. If not, then the whole game probably starts all over again. That’s the fun part 🙃.
2 likes • 10d
@Erhard H. I actually think this is a perfect sentence you quoted. “According to your faith be it unto you.” That is exactly how I live. I choose not to believe that the material world is something evil I need to escape from, because if I truly believed that, my life would inevitably turn into hell. I choose not to believe that I need a fear based salvation model in order to be redeemed, because then fear would become the dominant force shaping my experience. According to my faith, that is precisely how reality responds. I do not live my life within an endless redeemer narrative. My faith is that this life itself is a gift. A space to experience what God has created, to explore it, to learn through it, and to engage with it fully rather than reject it. I believe we are all expressions of God. That God experiences life through us, explores itself through us, and even praises itself through lived experience. For me, honoring God means living my life as fully, consciously, and honestly as I can. In that sense, “according to your faith be it unto you” does not threaten me at all. It reassures me. Because it reminds me that what we believe shapes how we experience life, not that one rigid interpretation stands over all others as a final verdict. If self-determination is something I believe must be surrendered, then naturally my experience will reflect submission and dependency. But if I believe that conscious self-determination is part of how God expresses itself through human life, then that is exactly what unfolds. A life lived out of fear of life itself is no proof of truth. And a spirituality that cannot hold joy, play, or curiosity is too small for what it claims to explain. I’m also careful not to confuse a deeply meaningful personal view with a universal prescription for all of humanity. For me, the moment someone claims to know the purpose, it already turns into a belief system rather than lived truth. And I place my faith in God, trusting in merging with my soul, and so be it unto me.
Honor your body
I had an exchange on Instagram today and felt like sharing my text here. Maybe it resonates with you in some way. For a long time, I only drank when I was out. With people. At parties. Festivals. Concerts. Social gatherings. Being around others without alcohol felt unbearable. Drinking was not a choice. It was the entry ticket. At home, it was different. I did not miss alcohol at all. Not even a single drop. That alone should have told me something. Then one day, I woke up with a sudden, quiet realization. This body is the most extraordinary thing I will ever own. It keeps me alive without asking. It breathes, heals, adapts, carries me through every single day. It is the only reason I can experience anything at all. Without it, there is no seeing, no feeling, no remembering, no living. It is the only way I can perceive this life, to see, to feel, to smell, to move, to touch this world. This body, this one fragile, intelligent vessel, is the only thing that will truly stay with me until my last breath. And I was pouring poison into it. Again and again. Forcing it to fight, to filter, to clean up after me. I remember thinking: What am I actually doing? So I stopped. Not out of discipline. Not out of fear. But out of respect. Because I realized something even deeper: I was not drinking because I loved alcohol. I was drinking to belong. I would not have been with those people without drinking. I would not have been at those parties. That life only worked as long as I numbed myself enough to tolerate it. And that was the moment it became clear: I was living a life that was not really mine. When you are truly yourself, you do not need alcohol. You do not need cigarettes to hold onto. You do not need anything to escape your own body. The urge to drink is rarely about alcohol. It is a signal that your body already knows you do not belong where you are. That you are not living your real truth. And that truth does not have to look impressive. It might be quiet. It might be sitting alone at home, choosing simplicity over noise. But when it is real, you can feel it. And when it is real, you no longer need to numb yourself to survive it.
Where will A.I. bring us?
Society is on the move. AI is being implemented in several facets of our world and used by a large part of society already. It seems very ignorant to implement a tool as strong as AI without thinking about the consequences for the near and far future. The youth of today has lost the capacity to do simple calculations; without a calculator or smart phone they are lost for answers. And now we have chat gpt; fast access to a huge amount of information, but at the same time less and less people using their brains. Everybody has answers, but very few people can think. It is going to be very interesting!!! But maybe that is just another ego opinion, filled with fear and based on the feeling of losing control. In my mind it is very possible that AI will show us that we are already a very advanced form of AI. That we identify with our 3D body, mind and emotions but that we are a kind of bio-AI. The creator (programmer?) has built an ingenious virtual reality game / experience with rules and several levels. It reminds me of the time I was playing Donkey Kong on a machine in the bar where I spent a lot of my childhood… Maybe it was so attractive because it was completely in sync with the basics of the human game. Human being…. Who is doing the human being? Or…. Who is being the human? Or… who is having the human experience? I have no doubt that it will become clear to me(us) during this life. What an amazing time are we experiencing! ❤️ Jan
2 likes • 13d
Maybe they are not ignorant at all, maybe it is a carefully calculated act, done with full intent and strategic awareness. I’m firmly convinced, that the question is not what Al will make of humanity, but what humanity will make of Al (this remains true only as long as AI is freely chosen. When it is imposed through force or authority, the issue is no longer technology, but power and intention.) Every consequence flows from intention. And in a world increasingly numbed by distraction, only a small number will remain awake enough to stand above the machine as conscious beings. But history shows that even tools of distraction can turn into catalysts for awakening. Social media was meant to distract, yet countercurrents emerged and led to the opposite effect: more and more people waking up. For this reason, the real task is inner work, so that artificial intelligence can be used not to numb awareness, but to accelerate awakening and enable others to do the same. In the end, we cannot save others before we save ourselves. All we can do is work on ourselves, knowing that others will either recognize it, reflect it, or walk their own path. Just like children, people don’t change because they are told to. They change by observing. We can only live in a way that makes awakening possible. The rest is not in our hands.
Does quantum physics prove that we can change the world?
Lately, I came across a theory that suggests the world may not be broken, but out of balance. And that humans might be more involved in this than we like to admit. This perspective was explored in depth by a largely overlooked thinker: Walter Russell (1871–1963). A name that is mentioned surprisingly rarely, even though the ideas behind it feel more relevant today than ever. Russell was not a classically trained physicist. He was self-taught, an artist, a thinker, a teacher. This mix is exactly what makes him interesting, because he did not only try to explain the world, but to understand it as a connected whole. One of his central works is The Universal One (1926). He also wrote The Secret of Light, Atomic Suicide?, and The Message of the Divine Iliad. In all of these writings, the same core idea appears again and again: the world is not made of dead matter, but of movement in fields, of rhythm, of balance. Russell described the universe like a breath: expansion and return, building up and breaking down, compression and release. For him, this was not a poetic metaphor, but a fundamental law of nature. Everything moves toward balance. When balance is disturbed, tension arises, and systems try to regulate themselves. For a long time, such ideas were seen as purely philosophical. But this is where it becomes interesting. Many things Russell described intuitively are now reappearing in modern science. In quantum physics, matter is no longer seen as solid substance, but as excitation of fields. Empty space is not nothing, but an active quantum field full of energy. In quantum chemistry, we see that reactions do not happen only mechanically, but are influenced by coherent states and field interactions. In quantum biology, it becomes clear that even living systems react very sensitively to subtle energetic processes. So the basic assumptions match: The world is organized in fields. Everything is connected. Order does not arise by chance, but through balance and rhythm.
Update
Hello everyone, I've been taking a break latley, hope you're all doing well. I previously canceled the paid membership, as i hadn't been actively working on it. However, I'm going to re-activate it now at a discount from 55$/ month to 33$ / month. It will include the abundance program, the philosophy of the three paths, and the sacred library for now. I'll start working on adding new things more often. I'd love to hear your thoughts and what you might like to see there moving forward. Some have said they'd enjoy some guided meditations and such. Let me know of any specific problems you might be struggling with and i can create some solutions for you. Also, since the philosophy of the three paths has been free lately, i'll wait until friday 1/16 to add it to the paid membership. Stay blessed 🙏
1 like • 15d
✨🫶🏼✨
1-10 of 55
Ava Mudra
5
275points to level up
@ava-mudra-1023
Who are you, when nobody is watching? No audience? No applause? What remains when everything you’ve learned, imagined, and performed falls away?

Active 21h ago
Joined Nov 3, 2025
Powered by