avatarPurusha Radha

Summary

The article emphasizes the importance of personal experience in validating truth, encouraging readers to actively engage with and test the knowledge they acquire rather than accepting it blindly.

Abstract

The text discusses the journey of the mind in accumulating information through various sources such as reading, studying, and meditation. It posits that while theoretical philosophies are valuable, they only become truth when personally experienced. The author suggests that knowledge should be put to the test to achieve an intimate understanding, advocating for immediate action rather than procrastination. The article provides guidance on how to discern truth through personal experience, urging readers to blend mind and heart in the pursuit of knowledge and to live by their beliefs to confirm their validity.

Opinions

  • The author believes that truth is not absolute until it is personally experienced and proven.
  • It is suggested that relying solely on theoretical knowledge without practical application is insufficient for true understanding.
  • The article promotes the idea of not delaying the pursuit of personal experiences that resonate as truth.
  • There is an emphasis on the importance of acting from the heart and soul, rather than being guided by the rationalizing ego mind that often leads to procrastination.
  • The author encourages the use of discernment and provides three criteria for evaluating the truthfulness of information, although these criteria are not explicitly listed in the provided content.
  • The author advocates for a holistic approach to knowledge, combining rational thought with intuitive feeling.
  • The text implies that personal validation of knowledge leads to a more fulfilling and authentic life experience.

You Can’t Really Call it Truth Until You’ve Experienced it For Yourself.

Until then, it’s only an agreement.

All along, your mind has been gathering an awful lot of information. Enriching your mind is important to you as it should be. The world’s most successful people inquire into life. And they often do it through reading and studying what they read.

Add to your learning from books and articles the education you get from instructors, preachers, television, and film. And then if you’re very wise and spiritually focused, you receive great knowledge in your meditations.

As a result, your mind is full of theoretical philosophies. You’ve agreed they must be truth or you wouldn’t have embraced them.

The fact is, nothing is really and truly truth until you actually experience it for yourself.

You can accept even what I write here and consider it truth. For me, it’s definitely truth because I’ve experienced it. But it won’t entirely be truth for you until you experience it too.

It’s one thing to observe and quite another to experience it for yourself.

Experiencing means you put a concept to the test.

Experiencing means you’re seeking proof that thing is true. Once you prove it out, you have an intimate experience of it.

Don’t let your ego mind tell you to postpone your experience.

What you do with the brilliant guidance you get in meditation, books, articles, classes or film is your choice. Maybe you just let it lie.

But if any guidance rings true and loudly for you, don’t postpone diving into the experience of it.

Don’t wait for the perfect free moment in time. That moment may never come easily to you.

I do love Anthony Robbins’ famous quote:

Never leave the scene of a decision without first taking a specific action toward its realization.

Our rationalizing ego mind justifies our excuses for procrastinating. Our brain’s frontal lobe merely makes computations based on past data. And if fear of the unknown is in that data, and it most probably is, we’ll probably have a thought to put off a potentially life enriching experience.

Make the decision to act right now from your heart and soul. Decide to really and truly be all you are in your Essence.

Be the Unlimited Being who lives within you and who doesn’t do ‘almost.’

Don’t wait for January 1 or some other date in time. That just means you don’t really want to do it.

If you have the impulse or idea of a truth and life experience you’d like to prove out for yourself…

Start right now. Take one small action.

Truth must be proven. Don’t just swallow whole what anyone writes or says.

You won’t always be able to prove out every statement through direct personal experience. But you can use your faculty of discernment.

I wrote this article with three criteria to pass any postulated truth through to know if it’s true or not:

Blend mind and heart. Make your pursuit of knowledge a wholistic experience while you look at concepts from all angles. Lay any knowledge you’re unsure of on the testing ground of your life.

If it’s indeed the truth it will prove out as excellent experience in your life. So get started. Live what you believe so you can know if it’s really worthy of your agreement or not.

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Purusha Radha Starseed, time traveler, wayshower, writer Site: https://bio.site/stargatetrekking Subscribe at my site for bi-weekly spiritual insights. Email me My Conscious Time Travel Book

Truth
Procrastination
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Awakening
Wisdom
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