The lotus rises pure from the mud, uniting science and symbol, matter and mind. This reflection explores how the flower’s ancient imagery bridges the two magisteria of human understanding — the measurable and the mysterious.
Meditation does not mean emptying the mind. It means clearing space to think — a discipline of clarity that the Western tradition saw as sacred reasoning, not blankness.
For centuries, religion has offered meaning and comfort, but also control. Today many still hunger for faith, yet find the old stories impossible to believe. This short reflection asks whether we can keep what was best in religion — compassion, courage, and care — without pretending to accept what no longer persuades reason. It argues that meaning, not miracle, must become the new ground of faith.
The Christian God is not the Father we never had, but the Father we must become. This essay explores how Jesus’ teaching can be read as a psychological process of inner reconciliation — a journey from dependency to awareness, from outer authority to inner wholeness.
Tags: Jesus, theology, psychology, Jung, Tillich, Bultmann, Bonhoeffer, consciousness, metanoia, inner life
A meditation on the evolution of consciousness in Christian thought — from Paul’s “unknown God” to Jesus’ vision of the divine within — exploring how faith, philosophy, and awareness converge in the search for unity with the living spirit.
Syd Barrett, the founding spirit of Pink Floyd, sought illumination through LSD and found disintegration instead. His life traces the tragic arc from vision to madness — a false awakening born of brilliance without balance. Genius opened the door; suffering held him there. In the end, he became the King’s Fool: a man who saw too much, too soon.
From Daimons to Nothingness traces the human search for consciousness across three horizons — mythic, scientific, and existential. From Patrick Harpur’s daimonic imagination to the neuroscience of the brain and Sartre’s void within being, it explores how awareness bridges reality and illusion, hope and finality, ending in a lucid acceptance of our brief, luminous existence between two darknesses we call life.
A reflective essay on how Isaiah’s compassion, Jesus’ inner kingdom, and the Gnostic idea of the divine spark reveal a long evolution in humanity’s understanding of God — from fear of an external ruler to awareness of the divine within.
Resurrection can be read not only as a past event but as a symbol of awakening. The risen Christ becomes the image of consciousness itself — light overcoming darkness, fear giving way to awareness, union with the life already present within and around us.
Awe and altered states are not the private preserve of mystics. They are common human experiences, celebrated by poets across the centuries. The real work is not chasing “special states,” but learning to live more honestly in the here and now.