Thursday, April 16, 2026

Spirituality 2.0

 Letting go involves being aware of a feeling,

letting it come up, staying with it,

and letting it run its course,

without wanting to make it different 

or do anything about it.

David R Hawkins


You try to be nice. 

You want to be kind. 

You surround yourself

with crystals and books;

hear Eckhart and Sadhguru.

You do sound healing and Yoga.


Are you ready for spirituality 2.0?

Just sit there and stare into space.

See programs running, even “good” ones.

Doing good is a good first step, but not enough.

Sit and experience self at work in all manifestations.

Know, sense, feel and see self and let God do the rest.


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Learning in Relationships

 When we see a beautiful place, we want to visit it because it radiates attractive energy and makes us want to stay. When we meet people we like, we are drawn close to them—sometimes even wanting to possess them—because they radiate a lovely energy that attracts us.

The common quality of attractive energy is that it feels peaceful and warm. Most importantly, it does not feel harmful. When someone radiates this kind of energy, people around them do not feel threatened and do not feel the need to protect themselves. Naturally, they want to draw closer.

Similarly, when we encounter someone or something we dislike, it is often because they radiate an energy of judgment or contempt—not necessarily directed at us, but present nonetheless. Our instinct, then, is to distance ourselves or exclude them. Rejecting unpleasant energy is a natural human response. Another common situation is that two people with similar unresolved issues may attract each other.

Most people react according to the energy they perceive in others. After learning to meditate and practice mindfulness, it is important to observe whether we are still functioning in this pattern of direct reaction. When we notice such reactions, can we transform the energy? This transformation is not about changing the other person, but about transforming ourselves. It is an awakening—to see, soften, and loosen our own inner challenges. When we can do this, we rise into the energy of compassion.

By Suzhen Liu

If you enjoy Suzhen Liu’s writings, please check out her new book, “Discover Love Within—Release Your Suffering” available on Amazon.


Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Enjoy the show when “you” join the flow

 What we once lived and experienced as self occasionally clashes with “life as is.” Recognizing “life as is” and living in accordance with its flow is the means to getting the conditioned self out of the Way. It’s an inside job though, since body, mind and world are an item. “Life as is” manifests as 


S (tillness)

E (nergy)

L (ove)

F (low).


Actually, “life as is” always gets its way, but we only enjoy the show when we join the flow.


Monday, April 13, 2026

The External World as a Mirror

 The challenges in our lives—such as our interactions within the family—serve as mirrors, allowing us to see ourselves more clearly. When you look into a mirror and notice that the person reflected has messy hair, do you try to comb the person in the mirror, or do you comb yourself? In the same way, when external challenges reflect something back to us, it is we who need to adjust ourselves.

 

Through this process, we can discover how we think about and interpret situations. Our patterns of thinking and interpretation gradually form the challenges and obstacles we encounter. If we can observe ourselves at this level, we can recognize our issues immediately. This is how we address problems at their root.

 

Illness can also serve as a mirror. When we experience physical discomfort, we can adjust our minds accordingly. If we only try to handle problems on the surface, it is like sweeping away fallen leaves—the leaves will keep falling, and the work will never end.

 

As we begin to observe more deeply, we discover that issues, obstacles, pain, and discomfort arise from the mind. In other words, we create our experience through our thinking. The world we live in, the problems we face, and the pain we endure are all shaped by the mind.

 

Therefore, the first step is to observe, not to rush into solving the problem. These experiences become meaningful only when we explore what is happening within us and trace them back to their causes. Challenges are mirrors reflecting our reactions. If we focus on combing the hair in the mirror, nothing about our own hair will change. Without understanding how we think, there will always be endless issues waiting to be solved.

 

All pain, obstacles, and challenges merely reflect our patterns of thinking; they do not have independent existence. They arise because of the way we think. Our pain, our problems, and even the world we experience are created by our thoughts.

 

Isn’t it true that once a thought arises, a world is created—often without our awareness? Whatever we think becomes self-fulfilling. Wherever our thoughts lead, our life follows.

 

If you wake up thinking about hiking, your day will unfold in forests and wilderness. If you decide to go to the United States today, you will find yourself on an airplane, spending the day in transit. If you wake up wanting a meaningful date night, your evening will naturally follow that direction. Thought comes first; experience follows.

 

These are examples of surface-level thinking. Beneath them lie more subtle and deeper layers of thought, which are the true roots of suffering. When we look carefully at our lives, we can see that everything begins with how we think. A single thought leads to another, and then another, until we feel trapped and say, “I need to solve this problem.”

 

Yet the key is not to solve the problem, but to observe how the problem was created. When we pay close attention to our thinking, we can trace issues back to their source.

 

By exploring our challenges in this way, we gradually see that pain and difficulty arise from the mind. If we do not understand how the mind works, the same problems will repeat themselves. But when we clearly see how we think and understand our thoughts, we begin to experience the world with clarity as well.

 

By Suzhen Liu

 

If you enjoy Suzhen Liu’s writings, please check out her new book, “Discover Love Within—Release Your Suffering” available on Amazon.


Sunday, April 12, 2026

“You” are Consciousness at work

 The teacher who advises “you” 

to be mindful of psychological thought 

cannot bring about Realization.


The teacher who tells you 

to heal “your” psychological wounds 

cannot bring about Realization.


The teacher who tells “you” 

that you are “That” 

cannot bring about Realization.


Yet, all of them provide answers

and are part of the maturing process.

The fruit falls when it is ripe.


When the I is grasped, sensed, felt, seen;

when all hurts and aspirations are 

embraced, understood and let go of as they arise.


We cannot let go of self,

but we can see Consciousness at work,

and enjoy the ride—“you” are “That”!


Saturday, April 11, 2026

Truth sets us free

 There is a saying: “Truth sets us frees!” It’s meaning is simple, yet few truly understand it.

 

Take anger as an example. “I am angry at this person because he is not good to me. He is not considerate, and I begin to feel angry. In truth, I wish he would be good to me and do things the way I want. If he doesn’t, I feel that he does not love me. I don’t want to face this feeling, so I express it as anger.”

 

So, what is the truth behind this? The truth is: I do not want him to stop loving me. I do not want him to be indifferent to me. I long for his love. When I cannot receive it, I feel pain, emptiness, and loneliness. Deep down, it is not anger that is difficult to face—it is loneliness and emptiness.

 

If we are able to face the feelings of loneliness and emptiness directly, anger dissolves immediately. Until we face them, we take many actions driven by anger and waste a great deal of energy. The moment we meet these feelings honestly, resistance stops, and our energy becomes strong instantly. This is how anger is transcended.

 

So, the truth is not the anger itself, but our unwillingness to face emptiness and loneliness. When we face this truth directly, struggle, inner conflict, pain, and even confrontation naturally come to an end. There is no longer a need to waste energy.

By Suzhen Liu

If you enjoy Suzhen Liu’s writings, please check out her new book, “Discover Love Within—Release Your Suffering” available on Amazon.

Friday, April 10, 2026

Be mindful and then let it be

Creation is the mirror for the “I” to see itself.

Ramana Maharshi 


Body, mind and world appear in Consciousness. Our body puts us in touch with, our mind connects us with, and the world mirrors back the creation of “That.” We sense, we feel, we see a creation outside of our conditioning and the distorted reality mirroring back to us what we think we are all about. 


In a second-best world we can listen to our body, witness our feelings and thoughts and see the newness life has to offer just as much as the self-imposed distortions we superimpose on our environment. In a first-best world this creative Force channels its manifestation through us in the present moment.


How to reach this first-best world you ask? Well, do your best living in the second-best world and let it be.