The Secret of Manifesting With The True Self + Guided Meditation
When you close your two eyes that see the world, your one eye opens to the Truth and its Divine Will.
Manifesting has been the most sought-after topic on my YouTube channel. I understand why. Life is becoming more challenging for all of us, and at the same time, we are growing increasingly impatient. The information about our potential is more widespread than ever before. To rephrase Shakespeare: "We know what we are, and now we also know what we may be." No longer do we want to eat the carrot each day; we don't even chase after it anymore. We now know we can have the carrot cake.
The Fascination of Manifestation
Manifestation is my passion. It's not just something that makes life easier; it’s a profound process that connects our internal world to the reality we experience. Every day, I jot down new insights on how our internal wiring shapes our external reality. As within, so without.
Take, for example, Gustav Meyrink, one of the most intriguing occultists. He once wrote about why yogis stand on one leg for days—not just as a physical exercise, but as a practice of mastering the Will. Those who can balance for hours or days have mastered their inner energies, aligning themselves with their Higher Self. Meyrink referred to this higher consciousness as "The Hooded One," symbolizing its veiled, mysterious nature. Through aligning with this primordial force, Meyrink claimed to heal himself of diabetes, a literal manifestation of the Will’s power.
And as someone who practices standing on one leg every morning, I can tell you that this simple act does wonders to your brain, especially when manifesting because it does teach you how to align your inner energies.
Carl Jung and the Map of the Soul
Carl Jung also delved into this concept of the Self, though his focus was more on individuation than spiritual terminology. Jung spoke extensively about the Self, describing it as the highest expression of who we truly are. The Self governs our psyche, guiding us through life's experiences.
This brings me to Friedrich Nietzsche, who made a distinction between the Soul and the Spirit. Nietzsche criticized actors for believing that by embodying a famous character, they had tapped into their true essence. He argued that they had merely scratched the surface of the Soul, while the true essence—the Spirit—remained inaccessible. The Soul is the vehicle for this 3D experience, the Spirit is far beyond that, in a place that is dark and most of us are afraid to go there.
The closer we come to understanding our true essence, the more aware we become of our power. However, this awareness should never come from a place of selfish desire. Manifestation from the ego leads to what I call the "false light field." And there are energies that will happily feast on that. True power comes when we tap into the Self, not for personal gain, but for service.
The Self vs. The Ego
Let’s pause for a moment and reflect on the Self versus the ego. What is the Self, really? They say God is within us. The first spark of life, the first beat of the heart, comes from a force beyond comprehension. When we map out our psyche (see above), we see that the Self is at the center, like the nucleus of the Sun, with everything else radiating from it.
Jung believed that individuation—the process of becoming who we truly are—connects all the fragmented parts of our psyche. When we achieve this, we tap into the nucleus, or the Self, which contains the blueprint of who we are meant to be, perhaps even encoded with information from past lives. The Self holds the narrative of our life and also a connection to God.
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