Hypnotherapy is well known for healing trauma and pain relief. Hypnosis is also extremely valuable in working with sports enhancement, weight loss, motivation, self-esteem, anxiety, panic attacks, insomnia, increased confidence, smoking, phobias and stress related issues.

Category: True-Self (Page 2 of 5)

Unfold Your Infinite Potential

Becoming your best self is really just embracing your true self and your infinite potential, which is present here and now.

The rise of the human potential movement has been a huge benefit and a sign of consciousness continuing to evolve.

Firstly, the movement has created a new field, positive psychology, which focuses on the life-affirming values within you rather than focusing entirely on mental disorders.

Secondly, the movement has also raised the status of women in society, even though equality hasn’t been reached.

Finally, the movement has supported the notion of becoming your best self.

Your Best Self Is Your True Self

At this moment, countless people are pursuing that notion with hope and optimism. It’s the latest phase in self-improvement, which aims at lifelong well-being in body and mind.

But what is your best self, and how do you realize it? This hasn’t been easy to define, and many people are confused. If you aim to succeed in your career, for example, how is that balanced with other values like being fair, attending to your family, and not resisting others? Worldly success, as you often see, goes to people who are ruthlessly competitive, selfish, and unfair. Where does your best self come in? Through surrender, acceptance, and moral behavior? Even if this means getting taken advantage of?

There are countless other examples that crop up, because “best self” tends to be very vague and amorphous. I’d even venture that some people might end up hiding from life’s challenges in a passive way in order to preserve the feeling that they are being virtuous, moral, and spiritual.

What you need is a clear definition of the self, and I’d propose that the true self is already your best self. You don’t have to aim at it or try to improve it. The true self is present here and now. In your meditation practice, you contact it as the silent level of the mind, which is the source of every attribute of pure consciousness.

When you value theses things most in life – creativity, love, compassion, insight, curiosity, and personal evolution – its all connected to your source.

You don’t have to work or struggle to create these values. They exist innately. The reason you don’t realize this truth is that pure consciousness gets blocked or obscured when your attention is occupied with thoughts and sensations. You live out stories created from ego needs, desire, old conditioning, wishful thinking, and much more. However, every element in your story is a mental construct, and these constructs are a jumble assembled haphazardly in your past, beginning very early in childhood. Attending meditation retreats or wellness retreats can help reduce and ultimately work to eliminate mental constructs so that you can fully cultivate your potential.

How to Cultivate Your Potential

Human potential lies beyond stories and mental constructs. It is infinite, because no matter how many thoughts you have, how many actions you perform, or words you utter, there are infinite more waiting to be expressed. It must be remembered that this is the only definition of human potential that matters in the end. Otherwise, joining the human potential movement is merely taking up another mental construct and adding another page to your old story.

In practical terms, it is necessary to make your infinite potential unfold in daily life. That’s done basically by undoing your story, no longer participating in a constructed self-image. The only thing a story is good for is to foster a self-image that satisfies the ego.

Secondly, it is necessary to cultivate the true self by contacting it in meditation.

Outside meditation, you consciously choose to align yourself with the values of the true self by the following:

  • You stop struggling and opposing.
  • You learn to say yes more often and to accept others.
  • You resist the temptation to be judgmental.
  • You stop creating stress in other people and take responsibility for reducing stress in your own life – stress is always a symptom of struggle.
  • You walk away from negative situations and never engage with them.
  • You act out of love and kindness.
  • You consciously don’t do what you know in your heart is wrong.

The voice of the true self is silent, but in this list, you may see things you already know are right. The true self has been influencing your life, even when you feel trapped by your ego, self-image, and external circumstances.

Whenever you carry out the influence of the true self, you come closer to identifying with it instead of the ego.

The Path to Awakening

Moving from disconnect to reconnect is the path to awakening, and awakening is the fully conscious life. Steps of awakening present themselves every day. The possibilities existing in the present moment are infinite – they have to be because the present moment is a reflection of your own potential, which is infinite to begin with.

I hope this vision inspires you because you have never lost your true self. Communication has just been interrupted for a time, and as you restore these frayed lines of communication, the joy of existence will emerge very naturally and effortlessly.

With the end of struggle, the beauty of your own potential will be present every day.

Discovering the Real You = True-Self

The difference between being yourself and knowing yourself is wider than you might think. Learn how to discover your true self – and access the richest sources of human fulfillment.

It may sound strange, but for most people there is a wide gap between “being yourself” and “knowing yourself.” The first is considered desirable. When you are able to be yourself, you feel natural and relaxed, without pretense or defenses.

Knowing yourself is a different matter. A century after Freud discovered the subconscious mind, it has been identified with the darker side of human nature. We repress our urges of anger, anxiety, envy, insecurity, and even violence.

Of course you cannot get along with other people if you say everything you think or act on every impulse. But there’s more to it – once the inner world is identified with the dark side, people don’t want to look there. They dislike and fear what they find, or might find. This aversion creates the gap I referred to.

We identify with the ego-personality, which presents the self we want the world to see, and we ignore the opportunity to deeply explore what a deeper self might be. In time, countless people actually believe that their ego-personality is their real self.

Yet there are two more selves we all possess, and they are nothing to fear. In fact, they are the richest sources of human fulfillment.

The Unconscious Self

The first is the unconscious self. Even though we find negative emotions and impulses deposited in our subconscious minds, the whole story is much more positive. The unconscious self is creative and sensitive. When you walk into a room where someone has been arguing or crying, you silently sense it “in the air.” Actually, you are sensing it through your unconscious self.

At the level below everyday awareness, you constantly perceive your surroundings. You also have the power of intuition in your unconscious self. You gain “aha” moments when the unconscious self reveals something to you that your conscious mind didn’t realize.

As we mature, the expansion of consciousness we begin to value is rooted in the unconscious. A mature person feels confident, self-reliant, and sure of what he or she knows. This isn’t a matter of running down a mental list to count all the things you are good at. Instead, your unconscious self has given you the experience of fulfillment, which over time becomes a natural part of who you are.

The True-Self

The second self we should explore is even more valuable – call it the true self. This is a level of awareness very close to our source in pure consciousness. Pure consciousness is silent and still. It has the potential for mental activity before any activity arises. It is the pure “I am” of existence.

As the still silence of “I am” starts to vibrate into thoughts, images, feelings, and sensations, the first stirrings are very faint and subtle. They are very fluid and malleable, which is why desires and intentions that come from our deepest source are not distorted by all the cruder demands of the ego, which is constantly seeking pleasure and sensory distractions.

The true self is what we seek when we meditate, because only here is “I am” enough to bring total fulfillment. No external gratification compares with this. It seems strange on the face of it why the mind at its subtlest level should be more fulfilled than the mind at more superficial levels.

The key is that pure consciousness contains infinite resources of creativity, bliss, intelligence, love, and awareness. By living close to the source, you have access to this infinite potential. You acquire the ability to be a genuine co-creator of reality.

The 3 Selves

I’ve put these three selves:

  • the ego-personality
  • the unconscious self
  • the true self

Let us separate boxes only for the purpose of description. In daily life we call upon all three continuously. As awareness rises from its source, any impulse has an unconscious component and eventually an ego component.

A common example is friendship that develops into romantic love. Two friends interact largely on an ego level, meaning that they present their social persona to each other. But as friendship deepens, the unconscious reveals itself more intimately, and sometimes, if the two people feel safe enough, a more intimate kind of love reveals itself.

The spiritual journey of self-knowing operates in a similar way. We become open enough and feel safe enough to peer into the unconscious, and then even deeper into the impulses of love, creativity, and intelligence that are constantly welling up from pure consciousness.

In fact, any thought, when traced back to its origins, turns out to be an impulse of the true self. We spend our lives masking this fact, identifying only with the end stage, the eruption of mental activity on the surface, where the ego-personality functions. But no matter how hard we try to mask it, the true self never becomes distorted or crushed.

In the journey of self-discovery, the true self is both goal and guide. It promises supreme fulfillment and delivers on the promise simply by being there already.

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