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Dimentions of unawareness

This space is for a reflection, perhaps an intuition or maybe a misconception: reality extends far beyond what we humans can perceive.
We are blinded by the anxiety to understand it, the urgency for answers, and the need to escape what scares us. Reality doesn't exist for us; it's elusive. Our attempts to understand it make it more incomprehensible. Its dimensions exceed our perception.
The answers may remain elusive, expressed in a form we don't know.
But awareness of our limitations and shedding illusions might offer a bit more illumination.


The journey consists of 5 stages:

DOUBT

Human uniqueness lies in our capacity for illusion, crafting a reality beyond nature's grasp. Yet, our senses are limited, and we misconstrue our illusions as absolute truths. This pursuit of control has made us prey to our own unrealistic expectations. Our universe is but a distorted fragment of reality. To truly understand, we must shed illusions, acknowledging our limitations, and embark on a quest for deeper knowledge.

PERCEPTION

In the realm of understanding, conventions shape our perceptions, and certainties rely on collective agreement. We're confined in a box, its limits defining our understanding. Accepting doubt as intrinsic, we transform it into inquiry, aware of our sensory and environmental constraints. It's a balance between humility and aspiration, exploring the boundary between perception and reality. The nature of reality remains elusive, driving our evolving journey.

RESEARCH

Individuals exist in their unique dimensions of space and time, like grains of sand on an infinite beach. Each is a universe in miniature, unable to perceive the whole. Empathic abilities could bridge these separate universes, allowing shared perceptions and connections beyond our current understanding. This concept challenges human-centric thinking and reveals the potential for profound interconnection.

POSSIBILITY

Time is typically viewed as a linear, one-dimensional continuum, but it might not be so. Our sensory limitations could hinder us from perceiving other dimensions of time. Imagine time as a two-dimensional plane with segments of varying lengths and directions, intersecting at multiple points. Each segment represents a life, and an entity might move backward and forward along its segment, experiencing a life where aging reverses into rejuvenation and memories are continuously erased, all without awareness.

ABOVE

Our perception of reality, often confined to a three-dimensional view, might be just a fraction of what exists. If we could perceive more dimensions, like a four-dimensional space with eight interconnected perspectives, our reality would expand. But our senses are limited, possibly preventing us from experiencing a deeper reality. The quest to understand more dimensions remains unanswered, as our cultural and biological limitations may restrict us from seeing beyond what we currently perceive. We must accept these limitations.

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