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This discussion challenges the modern "live your truth" mantra by arguing that sacred truth is an objective structure rather than a subjective feeling. The speakers advocate for an impersonal spirituality—defined as non-possessive participation in a reality that exists independently of the individual’s ego, trauma, or desires. By critiquing the identity upgrade, the text warns that we often instrumentalize spiritual practices to serve the self, turning what should be a transformative architecture into a mere accessory for our own personalities. Ultimately, the source suggests that true liberation is found through fidelity to structure and the use of traditional guardrails to ensure we are standing within a transcendent truth rather than simply worshipping a mirror.
By Joseph Michael GarrityThis discussion challenges the modern "live your truth" mantra by arguing that sacred truth is an objective structure rather than a subjective feeling. The speakers advocate for an impersonal spirituality—defined as non-possessive participation in a reality that exists independently of the individual’s ego, trauma, or desires. By critiquing the identity upgrade, the text warns that we often instrumentalize spiritual practices to serve the self, turning what should be a transformative architecture into a mere accessory for our own personalities. Ultimately, the source suggests that true liberation is found through fidelity to structure and the use of traditional guardrails to ensure we are standing within a transcendent truth rather than simply worshipping a mirror.