Category: Breathwork
-
Life as a Whirlpool
Understanding Your Place in the World Have you ever looked at yourself in the mirror and thought of your body as a solid, permanent object—like a brick or a piece of furniture? Most of us do. But if we look closer at the science and philosophy of life, we find a much more exciting reality.…
-
The Whirlpool Paradox – Why You are a Process Not a Person
Most of us navigate existence as if we were isolated islands—limited, localized forms adrift in an indifferent environment. This sense of being a “closed system” is the primary engine of our modern anxiety, fueling a profound feeling of disconnection from the world around us. We treat our “self” as a static object to be protected,…
-
The Sound of Creation
A Primer on the Divine Word and Universal Flow 1. Introduction: The Primordial Sound To the student of comparative metaphysics, the universe is not a collection of static objects, but a singular, dynamic event. Ancient wisdom traditions converge on a foundational premise: that the transition from the Unmanifest to the Manifest is facilitated by a…
-
Love: Understanding True Nature
We navigate our lives under a persistent grammatical error of the soul: we treat the most profound forces of existence—Love, Energy, and Life itself—as static nouns. We speak of “finding” love as if it were a hidden treasure, or “losing” energy as if it were a misplaced set of keys. This linguistic habit reinforces an…
-
Love is a Verb – You are That
It is the nature of Love to Love 1. The Illusion of Solidity We inhabit a world that feels deceptively firm beneath our feet, yet we often struggle to reconcile this apparent solidity with the undeniable, underlying reality of constant change. We have been conditioned to view ourselves as fixed, “solid” entities—biological objects moving through…
-
Stop Being a Noun – 5 Surprising Lessons from the Science of Flow and Being
1. The Hook of the “Static” Trap Most of us navigate existence under the heavy illusion of the “static.” we treat our identities, our anxieties, and our physical health as fixed objects—solid nouns that we must carry through time. We speak of “my stress” or “my personality” as if these are permanent structural pillars in…
