As I was driving one day, a revelation struck me with the force of a thunderclap—an insight so powerful it seemed to pierce through every layer of doubt and confusion. It arrived not randomly, but in the stillness that followed deep prayer, meditation, and reflection on the nature of prayer itself. In that moment, it felt as though I had discovered a secret formula—a kind of spiritual key. Yet the more I sat with it, the more I recognized the irony: this “new” discovery was something I had encountered countless times before, hidden in plain sight within ancient texts and familiar teachings. It was not new at all—only newly understood.
Everything began to make sense. I had always wrestled with the idea of the Bible being the “Word of God,” though it was clearly penned by human hands. But if God truly resides within us, then any soul who surrenders to the divine spark within can become a vessel through which divine inspiration flows. The sacred is not somewhere else, authored by distant, chosen few. It is here, within us, waiting to be acknowledged.
Reflecting on the lives of the great mystics and sages—the yogis, the Buddha himself—it became clear: they weren’t reaching toward something far away. They were learning to listen. In tuning in to that still, small voice within, they discovered a truth they never imagined was so intimately theirs all along.
Verses I once glossed over now echoed with clarity and resonance. Psalm 82:6 declares, “I said, ‘You are gods; you are all sons of the Most High.’” And when Jesus says in John 10:30, “I and the Father are one,” it no longer sounded like spiritual hyperbole. It felt like an unveiling.
Even those who claim to channel higher beings under hypnosis—something I once viewed as mysterious or implausible—now seem to simply be accessing the same divine current. The idea of drawing from the sacred wellspring within no longer feels esoteric, but beautifully natural.
Suddenly, so many books, speeches, and podcasts that once felt transcendent now make perfect sense. They weren’t just inspired—they were born of the same source, flowing through open channels in human form.
Countless mysteries I once struggled to comprehend now felt like pieces falling perfectly into place. The message had always been there, but my ears were dulled by the noise—the layers of conditioning and complexity I had placed between myself and the divine within.
Even the cartoons of my childhood, with the angel on one shoulder and the devil on the other, now struck me as profound metaphors for inner guidance and conflict. The ancient story of the two wolves battling within—the one that wins being the one we feed—took on deeper meaning. It wasn’t just about feeding or starving a side of ourselves, but about surrendering—giving way to the voice that speaks truth from the heart.
In a conversation with my uncle, he reminded me how universal this understanding truly is:
In India, it’s called yoga.
In China, chi.
In Japan, ki.
In Indonesia, ulin napas. All speak to the same truth: stepping aside so the body—and spirit—can align, heal, and reveal.
My favorite book, the Tao Te Ching, written thousands of years ago, now shone in a new light. It was not merely a collection of poetic wisdom, but a dialogue with the divine—perhaps even with the inner child, the purest self. That, too, now made perfect sense.
Story after story across time and culture echo this same timeless truth. There is a world of difference between believing something because it’s taught, and knowing something because it rises up from within. This wasn’t just intellectual understanding. It was awakening. Enlightenment. The spark of a deeper life.
A moment of stillness. A thought, an idea, a story. And from that, the ultimate revelation, realization, and inner knowing.
It wasn’t found out there. It was discovered in here—where it had always been.

Dear Jimmy , Thanks for liking my post 🙏💐
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