Work on death, not on rituals or altars.
The one who understands that the true self never dies begins to work on death continuously — because, in a deeper sense, he has already died to the illusions of this world.
Such a person knows that this entire journey is already complete.
No one has ever truly “been here,” because everything we experience is like a dream — convincing, vivid, powerful, yet ultimately unreal.
Life operates as if it is solid and permanent, but beneath the surface lies a profound illusion.
The one who realizes this illusion experiences a different kind of death — not the physical end, but an inner dissolution.
The Illusion That Haunts Us
It is not life itself that deceives you.
It is not the outer world that haunts you.
It is your false ego — the inner identity you mistakenly call “me” — that clings to existence, fights for attention, and fears its own disappearance.
Deep within you, your true and peaceful nature longs not for survival, but for release.
Your entire life becomes a tension between these two forces:
- The false self that wants to continue.
- The true self that wants to dissolve into freedom.
You ignore the true inner being because it asks you to let go, to surrender the identity you have worn for lifetimes. Instead, you cling to ideas, roles, and false hopes of spiritual attainment.
Why Most People Never Reach Inner Liberation
Many people say they want awakening, peace, or spiritual freedom.
But they do not want to lose the identity that prevents it.
True liberation demands the courage to die while living — to let the ego fall away and allow the deeper awareness to shine through. Only those who are strong enough to face this inner death experience true freedom.
It is a journey of dissolving, not achieving.
A journey of returning, not becoming.
A journey of releasing, not collecting.
Among the many who seek enlightenment, only a very small number have the strength to undergo this inner transformation — the experience of dying to who they think they are.
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