It didn’t happen, right?

That thing you worried about yesterday, or the day before or for weeks, it didn’t happen, right? Maybe you even worried about it for years.

The thing you’re currently worrying about, it won’t happen either.

The psychological fear created by the mind’s projection into the future creates anxiety, worry, and stress on a continual daily basis. We can almost become in a constant state of anxiety all caused by our thoughts of the future. The future is simply a mind construct, it doesn’t and never will exist.

If we stay more in the moment, we are less in the future and then there is a whole lot less to worry about.

Enjoy now…because it will never happen as we imagine it.

Insane, eh?

The narrative in our head and the collective narrative are not the real life and world that our mind and the collective mind tricks us to believe.

Real life and world are the present moment now, the conscious moment that is beyond all the stories and narratives made up by our and the collective thoughts of a single or many human minds.

We can only become aware of this be unplugging from the matrix that is the collective human story and if we disassociate from our own egocentric story.

We are the human soul, the essence that transcends the fleeting temporary mental constructs that our thoughts consists of. The mind is just a part of us, it is not us.

Once we go down the path of consciousness and freedom from the never ending torrent of mainly repetitive daily mind-streams, then we see that reality is the freedom from thought.

Yet we are conditioned from almost our first few moments of life to believe differently. It is a repeating cycle as unconscious humans perpetuate the narrative in new arrivals.

Awareness of the conscious dimension of the now moment breaks the cycle and gradually it builds so that we spend less and less of our lives in the fiction that is the human mind, the mind that is nearly always obsessed with the past, victimhood and regret, or the future, the fictitious fantasy that is filled with psychological fear.

We can experience real life in this very instant and for as long as we choose by simply becoming the observer of our thoughts and disassociating with them, instead of believing we are those thoughts and becoming them in a Walter Mitty dream state that is seen as ‘normal’ life.

Normal life as we are conditioned is an unconscious state of nearly constant thought whereby we are blissfully unaware of anything that is actually real.

Insane, eh?