Becoming Supernatural

 
 
 

In the past, I have written about becoming a superior man or an evolved woman. The premise is simple: half the population is male or female, only a fraction become true men or women, and an even smaller fraction rise into higher states of consciousness.

In Power vs. Force, Dr. David Hawkins maps human consciousness on a scale from shame to enlightenment. Most people live below courage, trapped in fear, anger, desire, or pride. Men and women begin to mature when they attain acceptance and reason. And beyond even love and peace lies another frontier entirely.

In Becoming Supernatural, Dr. Joe Dispenza argues that human beings are capable of far more than modern society teaches. Through meditation, intention, and elevated states of consciousness, we can heal the body, transform the mind, and access dimensions of awareness once reserved for mystics and saints.

Ancient civilizations understood this intuitively. Egyptian carvings depicted the third eye long before modern neuroscience identified the pineal gland. Rumi wrote of lifting the veil of illusion to finally see reality clearly. Perhaps these traditions were all pointing toward the same truth: human perception is painfully limited, and awakening requires learning to see beyond the material world.

To evolve, we must understand ourselves more completely. We possess layered intelligences: instinct, emotion, and reason; physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual dimensions; energy centers that shape our chemistry, perception, and behavior. The ancients called them chakras. Modern science calls them neural and hormonal systems. Different language, same mystery.

As consciousness expands, identity changes. We become less driven by survival and more connected to meaning. Less matter, more energy. Less fear and a stronger connection to The Power of Now.

The next evolution of humanity may not be technological. It may be spiritual.

— Sina.

Sina SimantobComment