Thursday, March 10, 2022

A More Humble Approach


A more humble approach:

a more humble approach, truly so - and in the sense of not insisting on a familiar world, that we know anything of value beyond this single moment and even this we don't really understand. The universe is far too infinite for any ultimate answers to be given, consciousness too unbound for any final comprehension. What we intuit is our position within the whole, a glimpse of our true nature, but never the entirety as it's impossible to fully grasp the vast mystery of what we are and how it may unfold. 

this is the shift from the energy of being a seeker to that of an explorer, no longer demanding answers and frantically searching for the perfect means of revelation. It's now a more humble approach, a softer exploration to what's now and always present without need of anything other than a few questions of a simple inquiry, asking of ourselves who we really are and accepting silence as our revealing answer, an endless source of mystery that greets us in reply. 

it seems both science and spirituality search for final answers, a theory of everything as well as a claim to know the mind of God. Yet both are a search for limits, to know ourselves within the boundaries of what we believe right now. A more humble approach is to know ourselves as limitless, exploring the universe as our very own extension and that perhaps we are the very thoughts of God. It's knowing ourselves as belonging to the vast nature of the universe, of life, and by this not separate from any view of God that we may hold. Both science and spirituality are a quest for self discovery, and a truly humble approach must be one of our inclusion, to know that we belong within the framework of every question and that any answer is simply part of our own revelation. 

it's a more humble approach because of this inclusion, not being separate from the knowledge that we wish for, and that even questions, our inquiry, are already an expression of the answer. We don't stand apart from any exploration, not scientific experiment or equation, nor a mystical search for God it's all self-discovery, a singular view caught in momentary expression. It's an endless approach, more humble, as there are no final answers...

only questions, not yet asked.

~

Peace, Eric 


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