I'm not a robot

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Privacy - Terms

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I'm not a robot

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Privacy - Terms

reCAPTCHA v4
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Open text

Many times I have listened to men and women talk about what they want from life. Engineers, entrepreneurs, teachers, administrators, housewives, secretaries, students, workers, and many others have told me their stories to find what they long for most; when they overcame the pain and continued to explore the depths of their inner world, when they experienced fear but found the courage to move on, realizing themselves. Of all the variety of destinies, I highlight one main thought that people bring to me: I am alive! I live! I want to feel this life in its entirety! And everyone tries to become more alive because he knows that too often he is not as alive as he could and would like to be. There are so many external obstacles to our full life: chance, illness, death, social, political and economic intrusion strength And we flounder in the whirlpool of these obstacles, this vanity that takes away our lives, turning us into machines to achieve goals, sometimes not our goals. Too often we are blind and deaf to our needs, to our desires, to the sense of opportunities opening up to us in life. We have too limited a view of our nature and we do not know how to achieve the life that is our natural state. The main focus is to help a person hear his inner voice more fully and clearly in order to better manage his own life. So, we are “blind and deaf” to our own needs. We are people with disabilities. We are crippled by many influences; we are disabled to the same extent as blind and deaf people. We are not using our full potential. Our lost sense is more important than sight and hearing or smell and taste; it is the feeling of our being. This lost sense is inner vision, which allows us to constantly be aware of how our outer experience corresponds to our inner nature. If a person is blind or almost blind from birth, the only way to teach him about the sense of sight is to use imprecise analogies with hearing, touch or other senses . Figuratively speaking, most of us are blind, or myopic, from an early age. We know very little about our inner world, and most often we are taught to ignore or devalue it. “You don’t really feel it,” “You don’t really want this, do you?”, “Don’t be so emotional.” ","It doesn't matter what you want; you have to deal with the real world.” Inner awareness is an expression of my entire being, just like the feeling of love, anger, hunger, or emotional involvement in some activity. In this capacity, inner vision informs me how much what what I am experiencing at the moment corresponds to my inner nature. Since it is the basis of my knowledge of where I am and how things are in my subjective existence, it serves me in much the same way as my external vision. It gives me orientation and helps me choose the right direction within me. The organ of my inner awareness is not the eye, which allows me to look inside myself, nor the ear, with which I listen to my inner experience. Rather, it is my entire being, a pattern or gestalt that contains the meaning of who I am. The inner sense is open to a great variety of signals: external sensations, memory, anticipation of the future, fantasy, intentions and all other forms of inner life. We know how to use it when we fully focus our attention on the flow that is our being at the present moment. Unlike external vision, which we must focus to improve its performance, internal sense works best when we are relaxed and open to whatever comes naturally. I feel most alive when I am open to the full diversity of my inner life - desires, emotions, thoughts, bodily sensations, relationships, reason, foresight, caring for others,»

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