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What you are aware of is your reality. Simple sentence. Infinite depth. Reality doesn’t just exist “out there” somewhere waiting to be discovered. It unfolds in here—within the field of your awareness. You could be standing in the same room as another person, breathing the same air, hearing the same sounds, yet living in two entirely different realities. One person feels peace; the other feels anxiety. One sees opportunity; the other sees threat. The outer world is the same, but the inner awareness is not. So what’s real? Both—and neither. Reality, as we experience it, is a mirror reflecting our state of consciousness. Awareness is the light that reveals what’s in the mirror. When the light is dim, the reflection is blurry and distorted. When the light brightens, the truth appears clearer, richer, and more whole. The Power of Awareness Awareness is not just passive observation—it’s participation. The moment you become aware of something, you interact with it. You give it meaning. You bring it into existence for you. That’s why self-awareness is so transformative. When you see your own thoughts clearly, they lose their power to unconsciously steer your emotions and behaviors. When you observe your fears, they stop dictating your choices. What you are aware of, you control; what you are not aware of, controls you. The unexamined parts of the mind—those shadowy regions of pain, resentment, or false belief—still operate, but without your conscious permission. They become the hidden puppeteers of your “reality.” You react, repeat, and relive. The same arguments, same relationships, same emotional loops—different faces, same energy. Only when you become aware of those patterns do you gain the power to change them. Awareness Expands Reality Your awareness defines the edges of your universe. As it expands, so does your world. When you become aware of beauty, life becomes beautiful. When you become aware of love, love surrounds you. When you become aware of the miracle of breath, the simple act of breathing becomes sacred. Spiritual growth isn’t about escaping reality—it’s about waking up to more of it. You start noticing the subtleties: the silence between sounds, the energy behind emotions, the consciousness within every being. You start living not just as a thinker of thoughts but as the observer of the thinker—the still presence that watches everything come and go. And in that stillness, a new kind of peace emerges—not because life got easier, but because your awareness outgrew the chaos. The Practical Side This isn’t just philosophy; it’s profoundly practical. When you shift your awareness, your experience changes. For instance:
Awareness is the ultimate form of freedom. It doesn’t require money, status, or approval—just willingness. The willingness to look. To see. To wake up. The Art of Living Consciously Every day, life invites you to expand your awareness—to step beyond autopilot and into conscious living. You can start small:
As your awareness deepens, you begin to sense something extraordinary: you were never your thoughts, emotions, or circumstances. You were the awareness behind them all—the quiet, luminous presence that has always been watching. That realization changes everything. Because then, your reality no longer happens to you. It happens through you. Final Thought What you are aware of is your reality. So if you want to change your reality, don’t start with the outer world. Start with awareness. Expand it. Deepen it. Guard it like sacred ground. Because awareness isn’t just what you have-- It’s what you are.
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We like to believe we’re fully in control of our decisions — that each choice we make is born of conscious reasoning, logic, or even intuition. But beneath the surface of our awareness lies a vast network of memories, impressions, and emotional imprints that quietly influence almost everything we do. Each personal experience we’ve ever had — especially the emotionally charged ones — leaves a mark in the subconscious mind. Over time, these marks form into conditions, shaping our perceptions, preferences, and even the people we’re drawn to. In truth, we’re not as free as we think. We are, in many ways, walking reflections of our conditioning. Take attraction, for instance. Have you ever wondered why you keep falling for the same type of person, even after realizing that type may not be healthy for you? You may tell yourself, “I’m going to choose differently this time,” yet somehow you end up replaying the same emotional movie with a different actor. That’s not coincidence — that’s your subconscious at work. It already decided what “love” should look and feel like long before your conscious mind got involved. Sometimes, that decision was made in childhood, through observing your parents’ relationship or experiencing certain emotional dynamics yourself. The mind then stores that familiar emotional pattern as comfort, even if it’s toxic. So when you meet someone new, your conscious mind might be scanning for compatibility, but your subconscious is quietly scanning for familiarity. It looks for cues — the tone of their voice, their body language, their scent, their energy. Just one small detail can act as a trigger, instantly recreating the emotional signature of what your subconscious recognizes as “home.” And there it is — that spark. That magnetic pull you can’t explain. You tell yourself it’s chemistry, or fate, or a sign from the universe. But more often than not, it’s a memory disguised as destiny. Let’s paint a real-life example. Imagine a woman named Maya. Her father was emotionally distant but charming in public — the kind of man who could make anyone laugh but never truly opened up at home. Growing up, Maya learned to equate love with earning attention, mistaking emotional unavailability for depth. Years later, she meets Alex — charismatic, magnetic, a little mysterious. From the first conversation, she feels that irresistible connection. “He feels familiar, like we have known each other for years.” she tells her friends, and indeed, he does. Not because he’s her soulmate, but because his mannerisms mirror the emotional rhythm she grew up with. Her subconscious recognizes the dance — a dance of chasing affection, of proving worth — and pulls her toward it. Meanwhile, her conscious mind might whisper, “Be careful, this feels like the last one,” but the subconscious has already taken the wheel. This is how conditioning runs our lives — not out of malice, but out of memory. The subconscious doesn’t care if something is good or bad for you; it only cares if it’s familiar. Breaking the Pattern Awareness is the only true liberation. But awareness doesn’t happen when we’re constantly exposed to triggers. That’s why changing environments can be so powerful. When you step away from the people, places, and patterns that keep stimulating old emotional programs, you give yourself a moment of silence — a space where you can finally hear your own thoughts. In that quiet, the pattern reveals itself. You start to notice what your subconscious reacts to — the type of energy you’re drawn to, the tones that stir emotion, the circumstances that make you feel small or alive. Changing environments doesn’t erase the conditioning, but it weakens its grip. It gives you the breathing room to see it clearly — to respond rather than react. Yet real transformation happens only when you turn toward your triggers, not away from them. When you observe a familiar pull arising and ask, “Why does this feel magnetic to me?” you bring what was hidden into the light. Because here’s the truth: once a trigger is fully understood, it loses its power. What was once automatic becomes a conscious choice. The Path Forward Healing, then, isn’t about avoiding the same mistakes — it’s about understanding why those mistakes felt right to begin with. The subconscious doesn’t need to be destroyed; it needs to be integrated. Its old programs dissolve in the light of awareness, in patient self-observation, and in choosing differently even when the old pattern calls your name. So the next time you feel that unexplainable attraction — that lightning bolt that feels like destiny — pause. Take a breath. Ask yourself: Does this person feel new, or do they feel familiar? If it feels like déjà vu, it might not be love calling. It might be your subconscious asking for closure. And if you can see that clearly, without judgment, you’ve already taken the first step toward freedom — not just from others, but from the invisible forces that once guided your every choice. Reflection Prompts for Awareness Take a few quiet minutes, maybe after meditation or journaling, and reflect on these questions. Don’t rush the answers — let them rise naturally from within you.
🕊️ Awareness is not about judging who you were — it’s about understanding why you were that way. Once you see the roots clearly, the soil of your mind becomes fertile for something new to grow. |
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