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Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2025 6:27 pm
There are people who are very attached to spirituality. And when their personal desire, their mental preference, aligns with a spiritual cycle, everything seems fine: for one, two, three, or even four months, they feel like it’s a wonderful time – their soul shines, their heart glows, they feel good. They stay at home, only encounter spiritual people, everything feels gentle, kind, beautiful. It all seems perfect. But then, when the inevitable cycle shift happens – the material one, which is necessary for psychological balance – this person actually transitions into the material multiverse. They are no longer in spirituality by nature but in the material world. Yet, their mind and autopilot resist it, trying to continue living as they did before, when they were in the spiritual cycle. They don’t want to accept that they have already shifted into the material cycle, which is unavoidable and necessary. They feel that spirituality has faded away, and it either scares or irritates them. And instead of adjusting, they resist all the impulses and desires coming from the material multiverse. They cling to their old way of living, trying to maintain a spiritual rhythm that no longer matches their reality. These are the people who suffer the most.
So, let’s draw a rough conclusion – without nitpicking whether there are four worlds or not, let’s just say for now that there are two. I see it this way: a person who is deeply immersed in spirituality and completely rejects the material world is naturally undeveloped in that material world. They have no friends or acquaintances there and don’t even know what to do in it. It’s as if their “other self,” their material personality, was never even activated to grow, live, and move through its steps. The spiritual person, who lives by the heart, rejects that part of themselves. As a result, when a person spends six months in a spiritual cycle, they feel great. But when the material cycle begins – when the material multiverse takes over – this person suffers the entire time. They see those six months as unlucky or meaningless, simply waiting and enduring until “something unknown” finally ends and the spiritual cycle begins again. There are people who are spiritually extreme, and they are happy only half the time – when their desires align with the cycle and the cycle aligns with their desires. But when the opposite cycle appears, they struggle, resist, and suffer through it. And the same goes for the reverse. Now you understand that there are material and social people who are completely dependent on the material-social rhythm. They are accustomed to it, don’t want to change, and wish to always stay in that
So, let’s draw a rough conclusion – without nitpicking whether there are four worlds or not, let’s just say for now that there are two. I see it this way: a person who is deeply immersed in spirituality and completely rejects the material world is naturally undeveloped in that material world. They have no friends or acquaintances there and don’t even know what to do in it. It’s as if their “other self,” their material personality, was never even activated to grow, live, and move through its steps. The spiritual person, who lives by the heart, rejects that part of themselves. As a result, when a person spends six months in a spiritual cycle, they feel great. But when the material cycle begins – when the material multiverse takes over – this person suffers the entire time. They see those six months as unlucky or meaningless, simply waiting and enduring until “something unknown” finally ends and the spiritual cycle begins again. There are people who are spiritually extreme, and they are happy only half the time – when their desires align with the cycle and the cycle aligns with their desires. But when the opposite cycle appears, they struggle, resist, and suffer through it. And the same goes for the reverse. Now you understand that there are material and social people who are completely dependent on the material-social rhythm. They are accustomed to it, don’t want to change, and wish to always stay in that