Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Expanding Our Awareness

Human beings usually live within a limited field of awareness. Our attention is constantly occupied by thoughts, emotions, desires, fears, routines, and personal concerns. We see the world, but often only partially. What we notice depends greatly on the condition of our mind and heart.

One simple example is romantic love. When we fall in love, our awareness changes dramatically. The world seems to shrink until only the lover and the beloved remain at the center of experience. Everything else fades into the background. This shows us something important: awareness is not fixed. It can narrow, intensify, expand, or deepen.

If awareness can contract around fear, anger, desire, or attachment, then perhaps it can also grow into something wider and clearer.

Throughout history, philosophers, psychologists, artists, mystics, and spiritual teachers have explored this possibility. Many have suggested that human beings are capable of a deeper mode of seeing — a more awakened awareness that is less trapped within the small boundaries of the ego.

An artist often reveals this truth. A painter does not merely copy the visible world; he expresses what he has perceived inwardly. A poet transforms subtle experiences and intuitions into words. Great art expands our own perception because it helps us see what we had previously overlooked. In this sense, art is awareness made visible.

There are also moments when we become aware not only of the world, but of awareness itself. Instead of being completely absorbed in thoughts and emotions, we begin observing them. We notice anger arising. We observe fear. We watch the movement of thought. This self-reflective awareness creates inner space and clarity. Psychology calls this metacognition. Contemplative traditions speak of mindfulness, watchfulness, or awakening.

As awareness deepens, life itself may begin to appear differently. We become less imprisoned by compulsive reactions and narrow self-interest. We notice beauty more deeply. We become more sensitive to truth, suffering, silence, and interconnectedness. Compassion grows. Perception becomes less mechanical and more alive.

Many traditions see figures like Jesus Christ and Gautama Buddha as examples of profoundly expanded awareness. Though understood differently in different religions, both are associated with extraordinary clarity, compassion, freedom from ego-centeredness, and transformative presence. They point toward the possibility that human consciousness can mature far beyond its ordinary condition.

The expansion of awareness is not merely an intellectual exercise. It is a transformation in the way we experience reality and ourselves. It begins when we observe our own minds honestly and attentively. It grows through silence, contemplation, humility, love, and deep reflection.

Perhaps one of the greatest adventures of human life is this inward journey — the gradual awakening from a narrow and fragmented consciousness into a fuller awareness of reality, truth, beauty, and love.

To seek expanded awareness is not to escape life. It is to become more fully alive within it.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Human Beings and God: An Internet Analogy for Spiritual Reality

 

The idea that “God dwells within us” is found in many spiritual traditions around the world. But what does that really mean? Is God somehow confined inside a human being? Or is there within us a capacity to experience and connect with the Divine?


A simple analogy from our modern world may help us think about this more clearly — the analogy of a phone and the internet.


Through a phone, we can access the internet. Yet the internet is not contained inside the phone. Even if the phone is switched off, the internet continues to exist. The internet is vastly greater than any single device, yet a small phone can connect to that immense reality when the connection is open.


The relationship between human beings and God may be understood in a similar way.


God is not confined within a human mind or personality. The Divine cannot be reduced to our thoughts, emotions, or mental experiences. Yet within every human being there seems to be an inner doorway through which the presence of God can be experienced. That doorway may be described as our deepest level of consciousness.


Human beings function on many levels. We have thoughts, emotions, desires, fears, memories, ambitions, and ego-driven impulses. Much of human life is often governed by these fluctuating mental and emotional states.


But beneath all these layers there is also a deeper level of awareness — a place of stillness, presence, truth, and inner clarity. When a person begins to live from this deeper consciousness, qualities such as love, compassion, peace, freedom, and wisdom begin to flow more naturally.


This may help us understand Jesus’ words: “The Kingdom of God is within you.” The Kingdom of God is not merely an external political order or a distant heavenly realm. It is also a divine life that begins within the human heart. When a person is governed not by fear, hatred, greed, or ego, but by truth, love, and compassion, the qualities of the Kingdom of God become visible in that life.


This does not mean that a human being is identical with God. Just as a phone is not the internet, a human being is not God. But just as a phone can connect to the internet, human beings may be able to connect with and participate in divine reality.


Prayer, meditation, inner silence, self-examination, love, and purity of heart may all strengthen that “connection.” On the other hand, ego, fear, selfishness, and inner noise can weaken our awareness of it.


In this sense, the goal of spiritual life is not merely to adopt a religious identity, but to awaken the deeper consciousness within us through which the presence of God becomes more real and active in our lives.


In a fearful and divided world, perhaps the greatest spiritual witness is a transformed human life radiating love, peace, wisdom, and freedom.