We Don’t Know w/ Sylvia
In this week’s unhinged gospel to the unknown, we unravel the wild and wonderful paradox of knowing oneself. Identity can be a trap or liberating — or somehow both at once. Depending. As Eckhart Tolle reminds us: “You must be comfortable not knowing who you are to know who you are.” Guys, you know I love a fucking paradox and multiple truths. I love them because they create space inside us, between us, and out in the world. Also adventure. Learning to hold paradox can also loosen the rigid mind that seeks safety through certainty, control, performance, and all the other unreliable coping mechanisms that often create more suffering than freedom. It can soften shame and judgment, which can lead to deeper intimacy with ourselves and others. Who doesn’t want that? Exactly. So yeah, per usual we challenge the status quo of capitalism, conditioning, and the fantasy that we human beings are fixed, fully knowable things. We explore what freedom for ourselves and others might actually mean — and how we are both radically different and deeply interconnected. I believe we can be gentle with ourselves while staying rigorously honest about our bullshit. We can befriend fear instead of organizing our lives around avoiding it. We can alchemize that into deeper trust in our bodies, feelings, hearts, intuition, discernment, and our ability to use the strange tool (or toy) known as the mind — without letting it use us. Human experience doesn’t resolve cleanly into one stable truth without loss of reality. So not blind trust, but relational listening without surrendering discernment. Because as we know feelings and bodily intuitions can carry wisdom, but they can also be shaped by trauma, projection, ideology, nervous system patterning, fear, fantasy, and all sorts of different survival strategies. But as we uncover, discover, discard, and integrate all these layers, we reconnect with our embodied intuitive knowing — and that can be fucking magic. It’s also important to name here, because I’m not sure if it’s totally clear in the episode, that some people use paradox and multiplicity to avoid accountability, clarity, or commitment. And paradox without grounding can become dissociation just as easily as liberation. Which is also why we must stay flexible and not get trapped even by paradox. Tricky shit, I know. The danger of mistaking self-narrative for self-knowledge is always present — we can remind ourselves that clarity is partial, not final. I personally practice this by trying to navigate one moment and one day at time, remembering that I’m changing, you’re changing — it’s all changing. Then I can meet each moment and version of myself and you with openness and curiosity. Take what lands and leave the rest. But do stay ungovernable, open, and tender. xSylvia Quote I didn’t cite properly is by Fannie Lou Hamer: “Nobody’s free until everybody’s free.” Book I reference in here and repeatedly highly recommend: Howe, L. (2017). Healing through the Akashic records: Using the power of your sacred wounds to discover your soul’s perfection. Sounds True.
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