Coming home without a path


The problem of humanity has never been behavior; it has been a mistake in perception that became fixed as identity.

 

At some point we began to believe that something was fundamentally wrong with us — that we are born broken and must repair ourselves, that we must first meet certain conditions before we are allowed to come home. From that moment on, we started building a world in which everyone must constantly prove themselves.

 

 

Rules, systems, degrees, achievements, spiritual rankings, moral scores — all attempts to repair a supposed fracture that never truly existed in God (consciousness), but only in the mind that believed itself to be separate.

 

Separation arises in the mind,

not in the Source

 

The moment a human being believes they stand apart from life itself, they begin to compensate.

 

One does so through religion and obedience, another through power and intelligence, yet another through achievements or through victimhood. But beneath all these movements lies the same fear:

 

“I am not enough as I am”

 

From this belief arise control, hierarchy, correcting one another, testing love, threatening exclusion — the idea that someone else gets to decide who belongs and who does not.

 

In this way we build relationships that resemble examinations

and we call that growth.

 

When someone believes the human being is a rough stone that must first be carved before becoming worthy, life turns into a workshop and love becomes a project.

 

But when someone discovers that the separation existed in the mind and not in the heart of God (consciousness), something else falls away: the need to earn oneself.

 

Then the movement shifts from forcing to Seeing

 

Then conversion is no longer about guilt, but about a change of perception.

And rebirth is no longer a new identity, but a remembrance of what has always been.

 

The drama of humanity lies in this amnesia.

 

We forgot who we are and called it sin.

 

We called one another sinners and turned that into a name — and from that name we began to live.

 

Whoever sees themselves as lacking will always measure, compare, control, or submit.

 

Whoever recognizes themselves as born from Love has nothing to prove and no need to dominate anyone.

 

Then power becomes uninteresting and presence becomes enough

 

What escalates between people is rarely a difference in vision; it is the fear of being wrong about who you are.

 

When one person lives from inner knowing and another from system and control, they touch each other’s foundations.

 

One believes they are bad and the other believes they are right, and the old thinking fears losing its grip.

 

The separated mind defends itself fiercely, because it believes that without structure or rank it will collapse.

 

So the core of the problem is not sin as an act, not the world as an enemy, not another person as an opponent, but the belief that we stand outside the Source and must climb our way back in.

 

From that belief arise religious shame, spiritual arrogance, hierarchy, the urge to correct others, and the constant need to test one another.

 

Remembrance, however, softens

 

Whoever remembers that they were never truly cut off has no need to humiliate another and no need to elevate themselves.

 

Love then becomes horizontal instead of vertical.

 

The question of who supposedly stands higher disappears, and only one question remains:

 

“Am I present, honest, and without masks?”

 

Perhaps this is the true awakening of humanity…

 

To discover that the fracture never existed in God (consciousness), that guilt was never our essence, and that what we call salvation is actually remembrance.

 

And once this is seen, the struggle for worthiness falls away

 

What remains is something simple:

 

Living from a heart that was never truly separated.

Rani Savitri

 

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