A Complete Guide to Finding Your True Self and Awakening to Your Full Potential

HJ: Finding your true self is the single most important thing you can do in this life and is the key to awakening to your full potential.  Your true self exists below the layers of conditioning that have accumulated as the result of societal conditioning as you grow and mature into an adult.  Finding your true self is not a process of learning something new, per se, but rather rediscovering what you already posses and releasing that which stands in the way between yourself and embracing your essence.

Furthermore, the process of rediscovering your true self gets you in touch with your intuition and moves you from a state of egoic projection and rationalization into a state of feeling and listening.  In this process, you will begin to truly understand yourself at an incredibly deep level, leading you to finally tap into and begin expressing your full potential.  When we move into the realm of intuition and listening, we finally hear the call of our soul gently guiding us towards our highest value fulfillment — our destiny, if you will.  Suddenly we have clarity and can begin to understand our life’s work.

This may all sound rather abstract and esoteric but after reading the article below you will see that it is at once absolutely practical and the key to understanding who you really are.

– Truth

I – Self Realisation and Non-Duality

By Lee Bladon | Esoteric Science

Self-Realisation

We are all suffering from mistaken identity – taking ourselves to be someone we are not. The goal of psycho-spiritual development is to correct this mistaken identity; not to strengthen or improve our false identity. The self that we think we are does not exist; it is a figment of our imagination. The self that we think we are cannot awaken – we have to awaken from that false-self in order to realise our true-Self. When this occurs, we realise that we have always been our true-Self.

The Labyrinth

Our inner journey takes us through the labyrinth of our ego structures to discover our true-Self (at the core of our being). A labyrinth differs from a maze in that it only has one path which leads to the centre, so the path is already mapped out for us – all we have to do is walk it. If we stop resisting and controlling, the flow of life will naturally carry us to our destination. Some parts of the journey will be tough and others will be wonderful, but they will all be experiential opportunities for the reintegration, development and liberation of our consciousness.

 

The Labyrinth – Symbolic Depictions of the Ego Super-Structure

Figure 24: The Labyrinth – Symbolic Depictions of the Ego Super-Structure

 

The most effective way of journeying through the labyrinth of our ego structures is to do so with conscious awareness and presence, because then we can process the psychological material (i.e. dissolve the ego structures and reintegrate our consciousness) as we encounter it. Then, when we finally reach the core of our being and realise our true-Self, we can be confident that we will not relapse back into ego-identification because the ego will have largely been dissolved.

Temporary self-realisation is the result of jumping to the core of our being (e.g. through intense will) without dissolving the ego structures. If this occurs, it is only a matter of time before the lure of the ego pulls us back out again, because too many ego structures remain for the Self-realisation to be permanent.

Seeking Self-realisation before we are ready is unwise because we are seeking freedom from something (i.e. the false-self) that we still require for our development. However, our conditioning can cause us to remain misidentified with the ego-self longer than necessary. So here are a few simple things that we can do to loosen our identification with our ego-self:

  • Don’t take things personally: Let go of any definitions or concepts of yourself as a personal “I” and see yourself as impersonal pure awareness.
  • Forgive everyone and everything: You can’t change what has happened so why hold onto the personal feeling of victimhood?
  • Be selfless: Put other people’s needs ahead of your own and dedicate part of your life to serving or helping others.
  • Be authentic at all times: Don’t put on a different persona for different occasions.
  • Have fewer preferences and opinions; especially about things that don’t really matter.

The Path to Self-Realisation

In early childhood, if something authentic (e.g. an essential quality or our true-Self) is not acknowledged and mirrored back to us by our parents, we presume it is unimportant so we repress it and develop ego structures that will help us cope without it. Psycho-spiritual development is about reversing that process – removing the blockages, bringing things into the light and turning the repression into expression. Self-realisation only becomes possible when sufficient psychological “undoing” has been completed – when our conditioning has been neutralised and our awareness has been purified (i.e. dis-identified from exiles and ego structures).

Even though Self-realisation is an instant event, there are several stages leading up to it that can be used to gauge our progress and guide us onto the next stage of our journey:

  • Stage 1 involves consciously noticing our thoughts, emotions and body sensations.
  • Stage 2 involves realising that these thoughts, emotions and sensations are not us.
  • Stage 3 iinvolves realising that we are the awareness that is noticing these things.
  • Stage 4 involves developing a felt sense that we are this awareness.
  • Stage 5 involves experientially knowing and feeling that we are pure awareness.
  • Stage 6 involves experientially knowing and feeling that Awareness (God/Life/Universe) is being us.

In a deep meditation we might be able to reach stage 3 or 4, but in our everyday lives we may only be at stage 1 or 2. This is quite normal, but we can bring these higher states of consciousness into our everyday lives through Conscious Living (see Chapter 4) and Living Presence (see Chapter 6). When we reach stage 3 or 4 in our meditation practice we can start practicing spiritual Self-inquiry (see Chapter 6); prior to that it is more beneficial to practice personal self-inquiry (see Chapter 4).

Non-Duality

Self-realisation results in non-dualistic perception – a direct and intimate unity with everything we encounter. But what does it really mean and how does it work?

  • Dualistic Perception: The true-Self has forgotten who it really is and believes it is the false-self (a conceptual self-image). So the false-self stands between the true-Self and objective reality (as depicted in Figure 25). The false-self perceives the object, and the true-Self believes it is the false-self perceiving the object, so there is no direct perception. There is separation between the true-Self and the object – hence duality. Note: The false-self doesn’t actually do any perceiving (because it is just a thought-form); it is more like a lens that the image passes through (and often gets distorted by) on its way to being perceived by the true-Self.

 

Dualistic Perception

Figure 25: Dualistic Perception

 

  • Non-Dualistic Perception: With the false-self no longer present, the true-Self can perceive the object directly (as depicted in Figure 26). There is nothing between the true-Self and the object, so the true-Self can intimately merge with the object to directly perceive every attribute – hence unity (or non-duality).

 

Non-Dualistic Perception

Figure 26: Non-Dualistic Perception

 

Separation and duality are learning experiments. The Self becomes identified with the false ego-self in order to experience duality – to experience life from a different, separate, non-unified perspective. When we have learnt all we can from separation and duality we will naturally return to unity and non-duality (i.e. Self-realisation).

The Mechanics of Self-Realisation

Figure 27 shows the relationships between the authentic personality and the true-Self, the true-Self and the false-self, and the false-self and the ego-personality. The numbered blocks at the bottom of the diagram correspond to the following numbered points:

1. Collectively, the mind, heart and body constitute the authentic personality.

2. (Prior to enlightenment) the true-Self is the core of the authentic personality.

3. But the true-Self has lost sight of its true nature and believes it is the false-self (self-image).

4. The false-self is the core of the ego personality.

 

Self-Realisation

Figure 27: Self-Realisation

 

The more ego structures we dissolve, the more authentic consciousness is liberated. This gradually shifts the balance of power from the false-self and the ego-personality to the true-Self and the authentic personality. Self-realisation becomes possible when the balance of power has shifted in favour of the true-Self and authentic personality.

Self-realisation (full or partial) is always accompanied by a shift in our essential identity. If there is no shift in our essential identity we are just having a spiritual experience. Even a partial Self-realisation can be so profound that it feels like enlightenment (which is the cause of much misunderstanding around the subject).

Four Levels of Self-Realisation

There are 4 levels of Self-realisation, and the level realised is directly related to the Self’s level of development (i.e. whether it is centred in the belly, heart, head or soul). If the Self awakens to its true nature when it is centred in the personality (belly, heart or head), the realisation will only be partial. Partial Self-realisation is much more common than full Self-realisation (enlightenment). Partial Self-realisation is waking up to one dimension of Self (will, love or knowing), waking up to one dimension of reality (physical, emotional or mental) and waking up from one set of illusions (physical, emotional or mental). Only the dimension of Self related to its location is realised; the other dimensions of Self remain un-realised:

  • Body: If Self-realisation occurs when the Self is located in the belly centre (i.e. during the primitive stage), only the “will” dimension of Self is realised. This results in profound peace, confidence and well-being, and an existential felt sense of Self/no-self.
  • Heart: If Self-realisation occurs when the Self is located in the heart centre (i.e. during the civilised or developed stages), only the “love” dimension of the Self is realised. This results in an exquisite, intimate and loving sense of unity with everything.
  • Mind: If Self-realisation occurs when the Self is located in the head centre (i.e. during the humanistic stage), only the “knowing” dimension of the Self is realised. This results in profound knowing and acceptance that everyone and everything is consciousness, spirit, wholeness, emptiness, oneness, completeness and perfection.
  • Soul: If Self-realisation occurs when the Self is located in the soul centre (i.e. at enlightenment), all four dimensions of Self are realised: the 3 personal dimensions (will, love and knowing) plus the soul dimension (being). This will be described in more detail in the section on Enlightenment.

Life After Self-Realisation

Many of the things that I am about to describe are often experienced for short periods of time prior to Self-realisation, as we are given glimpses of what our lives could be like:

  • Most people think that Self-realisation will be something different and amazing (e.g. peace, bliss and unity), but we are already these things – they are our true nature. When we rediscover our true nature we realise that these qualities have been present all along, we just didn’t notice them. So yes, Self-realisation is very different in one respect, but it is also very normal and familiar.
  • Our new sense of Self is far subtler than our old (false) sense of self. We discover a new way of being, knowing, loving and doing.
  • Realising our life’s purpose becomes almost irrelevant as our concept of a personal self falls away.
  • “I am” becomes “I am everything”, but it also becomes “I am not” as the duality of being and non-being dissolves.
  • Without a false-self to defend and bolster we can relax into our being, which results in a relaxed confidence and a general sense that everything is ok.
  • The entire personality relaxes under the direction of the true-Self. The need to plan our lives and control everything falls away – without our old fear-based strategies we can relax and just allow life to unfold.
  • A sense of direct knowing arises, which means we no longer need anyone else to validate our experiences, beliefs or sense of self. Our sense of self is no longer derived from our thoughts, emotions or body, or from the feedback we receive from others.
  • The mind becomes quieter and stiller. The constant labelling, narration and projection stop, and our personal story no longer seems important.
  • The emotions become purer, more authentic and less reactive. The heart opens up and personal, clingy love transforms into impersonal, indiscriminate, unconditional love that is more intimate than anything we have ever felt before.
  • The body relaxes and becomes more sensitive. Even the ordinary things in life take on a new depth and become extraordinary. It is like seeing the world through new eyes – everything seems so fresh, new, beautiful, exciting, curious and satisfying. We realise the inherent perfection in all things and know that everything is perfect just as it is.
  • We realise that we are Life (Consciousness, God, Nature, Universe, Source, etc.) dressed up as a human being, and so is everyone and everything else. There is only one consciousness and Life is playing all the roles; but like a molecule of water in the ocean, each of us is an individual and a unified part of the whole.

Note: Only some of the above are experienced after a partial Self-realisation, depending on which dimension of Self awakens.

Common Misconceptions After Self-Realisation

Partial Self-realisation can result in misconceptions about the nature of reality because we think we have awakened to the fullness of reality, but actually we have only awakened to one dimension of reality. Henry T Laurency wrote, inThe Knowledge of Life Part 5, “The evolutionary way of man consists of a series of ‘awakenings’ and at these he is seized with the desire to throw ‘overboard’ all that he has acquired so far… This only shows how far he has still to go before he becomes one with all.” This section explains a few of the common misconceptions:

  • There is no individual Self: Some say that there is no individual Self and that there is only oneness. By definition there can be only one oneness (i.e. the entire universe), so if a Self-realised person was that oneness he would be the entire universe and he would be aware of everything that is occurring within the entire universe. But he is not; he is just aware of the part of the universe that is around him. So there is a centre of consciousness after Self-realisation but it is much subtler than the previous false sense of self was – hence the misunderstanding.
  • Only Nothingness Exists: The belief that everything is made of nothingness comes from the fact that mental consciousness cannot perceive anything above the level of mind, so anything “higher” is perceived as emptiness, nothingness, spaciousness or void.
  • We Have No Free Will: Learning from our own decisions is an essential aspect of human development. It is true that ultimately everything is controlled by Life/Universe/God, but we are part of that universal consciousness. Gradually letting go of our individual will and becoming more aligned with universal will is an important aspect of our journey, but at no point do we have to completely give up our individual will. We remain an individual while our consciousness expands into the universal oneness.

Common Difficulties After Self-Realisation

The profound shift in our identity that accompanies Self-realisation can give rise to some difficulties:

  • Integration Time: It is quite normal to be a little “spaced out” after completing any healing and reintegration work, as our psychological circuitry re-wires itself. After Self-realisation the changes are much more significant and can have a far greater and longer-lasting effect on our psychological state. So please don’t make any important decisions until everything has settled down.
  • Lack of Motivation: After Self-realisation our ego’s false-will may no longer be accessible, so unless we have already activated our essential-will (an essential quality) we will be left with no will or motivation. Without anything to motivate us we will not want to do anything, which could cause our entire life to fall apart. It won’t matter to us, but it will affect those around us. It can take months or years to actively develop sufficient essential will to enable us to properly function in the world again.

Generally, the more ego structures (false qualities) that remain at the time of Self-realisation the more difficulties will be encountered. So it is advisable to do the inner work first and allow Self-realisation to occur naturally, when we are truly ready.

1 comment on this postSubmit yours
  1. F A N T A S T I C !… Thanks for sharing…I will read again,
    And again !…and smile…

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