1. Breaking free from the cycle of duality.
Let’s have a chat, shall we? In this world, the world of duality, we’re taught to believe in sides. Saint or sinner. Good or bad. Diabolical or divine. Inmate or warden. You’ve played all these roles, whether you like it or not. One minute you're the Bonnie, the next minute you're the Clyde. But the problem isn’t with these roles. It’s not the labels themselves that trap you.
The real problem is you believe them.
You’ve bought into the idea that you are one or the other. You look at yourself, at your brother, your sister, and say, “He’s the saint, I’m the sinner,” or “I’m the good one, she’s the bad one.” But that's the trick —the illusion. You’re neither, and yet, you’re both. You are all of it, or you are none of it. The duality only exists because you keep choosing to see it.
You believe in sides because you think that’s how the world works. But sides don’t exist outside your mind. You think you’re “good” when you're doing well or “bad” when you mess up. You think someone’s innocent when they’re being kind, and guilty when they harm you. But every time you pick a side, you reinforce the belief in separation. You reinforce the illusion.
The truth is, there are no sides. What happens if you drop the act? What happens when you realize that the saint and the sinner are the same? That divine and diabolical only exist because you've bought into the idea of opposites?
You can’t pick one without the other. They're two sides of the same coin. And if you flip it long enough, you'll start to see the coin itself is the illusion. You think you have to be one or the other, but the truth is, you’re neither. You’re beyond both. The only problem is that you haven’t realized it yet.
So, are you picking up what I’m throwing down?
Yes.
Good. Then you already know the next move — stop flipping the coin. Step out of the game. The world of duality will keep trying to pull you in, whispering, “Pick a side.” But that’s where the ego thrives, in the chaos of opposites, the illusion of separation. Once you stop playing, the whole game collapses.
And here’s the beauty: when you stop seeing yourself in sides, you stop seeing your brother that way too. You begin to recognize the truth — you are your brother. You’ve always been. There’s no Bonnie without Clyde, no inmate without warden, no saint without sinner. It’s all you, playing every role, every character.
But once you let it go, once you drop the need to identify with one or the other, freedom kicks in. You’re not bound by good or bad, right or wrong. You’re bound by nothing. And in that space, that timeless, spaceless truth, you realize — you are everything. You are nothing.
And that? That’s liberation.
Let it sink in. Feel it. Because once you truly get this, you can’t unsee it.
#thinkgod
I am sorry.
Please forgive me.
Thank you.
I love you.
No comments.