This synthesis of pantheism and mindfulness effectively reframes divinity as an emergent property of existence rather than an external authority. It offers a compelling argument for humility by grounding spiritual worth in our shared connection to the whole.
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Everything Is GodAdded:
Hello friends. Now this might just be one of my most controversial videos and so I just want to preface all of this by saying this is just what I think. You don't have to agree with me. You don't have to believe me and as I kind of loosely touched on in the last video, we can have these conversations as an expansion of perspective rather than from a place of defense of identity rigidity. But I wanted to share a little bit of how I conceptualize God, which I see as kind of a blend between metaphysics, physics, and philosophy. I take quite a cosmosychist approach to this conceptualization of God, meaning that God is the conglomeration of each fractal point of experience or existence. So everything that exists is God. Now this ties in with kind of Spinoza's interpretation, but I'm going to take it one step further to imply that maybe, once again, not a fixed worldview, ever evolving, that if God is the conglomeration of everything that is, everything that exists, then perhaps the cultivation of divinity is an internal process rather than something we were meant to seek externally. That we can experience divinity within ourselves by cultivating presence. Now I have no particular issue with religion.
I have many friends from multiple different religious backgrounds and honestly I love having these conversations with them because they always add something to my perspective and allow me to form a more nuanced and also empathetic approach to having these conversations. However, to me, as I've discussed in previous videos, it seems as though a lot of religions actually preach the same message just in different ways. The central focuses are similar, but their expressions are different. And yet those differences in the mere expression of an idea lead to such atrocious outcomes when it comes to people being pitted against one another.
And when we look through the history of religious texts, in fact or in the number of times that they were rewritten or altered to suit the existing sociopolitical like contexts, it does make me question whether this idea of God as an external entity was really created so that whoever could control what God wants could also control the people who believe in that version of God. And this idea of divinity being an internal state is also present in numerous other religious or spiritual traditions and texts, including Gnosticism, early Taoism, Sufism, with the core message being that when you go within, and I mean like truly within, deep underneath all of the layers of identities that we form around ourselves through the job titles we have or the racial backgrounds we come from or the genders we identify with. When we deconstruct all of those things and come down to who we are at our very core, which is a being that is having this conscious experience, we come to meet our internal state of divinity. But an important distinction I'd like to make here is that, you know, a lot of people they do talk about this. They say, "Well, God is within you." Or "You are God." And while I think to an extent that perhaps that is true, I also think that it misses out on a bit of nuance.
And that is that you are God, but you are one piece of it. As I stated at the start of the video, I think that God is the conglomeration of everything that exists. That each particle that comes into existence has a perspective through which it can offer the wider divinity, consciousness, God, whatever you want to call it. And I think that a lot of the time when people come to kind of this realization of their own internal divinity, often what it can do is end up perpetuating or fueling the ego when it is not matched with a level of humility or understanding that that while you do hold this inherent power, so does everybody else, whether or not they are aware or awakened to it.
Does that make sense? I hope it does.
And the humility is an important aspect here because it allows you to recognize that while you do hold power, that doesn't mean your power should be wielded against another. And now I don't know Kanye West personally, but I do think that he came to similar realizations and that we also saw how such realizations can end up fueling the ego and senses of spiritual narcissism, whereby a person comes to some sort of spiritual awakening or realization or ego death and then go on to believe that having had that experience makes them spiritually superior to others. When in reality, the bestowing of that experience upon them was really just meant to remind them that at our most fundamental level we are all equal. And I guess this idea also kind of lends itself to fractal monism. In fact, a lot of it is exactly the premise of fractal monism. And as previously stated, this idea has been around forever. In fact, it predates a lot of modern religion.
But the reason why I think it's so important, especially today, is because so much of what we see, whether that be environmental destruction, world wars, animal extinction, is really a manipulation of the psyche and a disacknowledgement of the fact that each being and everything that exists has its own form of value. It has something to offer to this wider conscious perspective. And even on a personal level, I think a lot of people suffer within their own lives because whether it be through socialization or trauma or past experiences, they too have forgotten their own inherent worth and their own value outside of what they might provide to another or provide to society as a whole. We tie our value to our jobs, our morals to our religions, our sense of self to romantic partnerships, and forget that none of that is actually inherently us. And if you were to one day wake up in a forest with no clothes, no job, no partner, you would still be a human being. And your life would still have enough value to you in order to at least make an attempt to survive. But really all this to say that when you come to this understanding that divinity is something that can be cultivated within, you stop seeking externally a sense of security and stability that only you can give yourself, which also makes you better at discerning what in your life is really in alignment with you and what perhaps isn't serving you, which kind of leads me into Carl Jung's individuation and Maslow's self-actualization. But that's a whole separate topic, so I'm going to save it for the next video. If you enjoyed, hit subscribe and post notifications so that you know when it comes out. And I love you guys. I'll see you guys next week.
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