divine awareness

  • THE WARRIOR WHO WALKS THE DREAM WITHOUT FORGETTING GOD

    The night deepens, and the clock does not hesitate.
    It cuts through illusion with each passing second, reminding the warrior that even the dream has discipline.

    Many speak of awakening, yet when morning comes, they turn their backs on truth. They say, “This is only the world. This is only work. This is only obligation.” In this way, they divide what cannot be divided, and their spirit becomes weak.

    A warrior must not make this mistake.

    Though this life is but a passing dream—what some call samsara, the great weaving of illusion—it is not without law. Fire still burns. Hunger still calls. The body must rise when the hour demands it. There are debts to be paid, responsibilities to be carried, and duties that do not wait for enlightenment.

    To reject these is cowardice disguised as spirituality.

    The true warrior accepts the dream fully, yet is not deceived by it.

    When the bell of morning sounds, he rises at once. Not reluctantly, not in complaint, but as one who has already chosen his path. He dresses, he moves, he enters the world of men—but his heart does not belong to the world. It belongs to God.

    Thus, work becomes no longer work.

    To lift, to build, to speak, to serve—these are not separate from the Way. Each action is an offering placed upon an unseen altar. Each task, no matter how small, is performed as if it were witnessed by the Eternal—because it is.

    The untrained man says, “I go to work to earn.”
    The warrior says, “I go to serve.”

    In this way, even the most ordinary labor becomes sacred.

    When he meets another, he does not meet a stranger. He does not meet an obstacle. He meets the Divine concealed behind form. Whether the face before him is kind or cruel, patient or foolish, he remembers: this too is God in disguise.

    To forget this is to fall asleep within the dream.
    To remember it is to walk the edge of awakening.

    At midday, when others scatter their attention like leaves in the wind, the warrior returns inward. He trains the body, that it may obey without hesitation. He trains the mind, that it may become still as a drawn blade. Whether through martial discipline or silent meditation, he sharpens himself.

    Twice a week, or a thousand times a day—it matters not. What matters is sincerity.

    And throughout all things, he chants.

    Not loudly, not for display, but as a current beneath the surface of thought. The sacred name, repeated again and again, becomes the thread that binds him to the Source. As taught by Paramahansa Yogananda, this constant remembrance is half the battle—for the mind, left unattended, will betray its master.

    The warrior does not trust the mind.
    He disciplines it.

    Yet even the disciplined mind will forget.

    Therefore, the warrior does not become discouraged when remembrance fades. He returns. Again and again, he returns. This returning is the Way.

    When the day ends and the body grows heavy, he does not cling to effort. He releases it. Just as he worked without attachment, he now rests without resistance. Sleep comes, and he allows it, knowing that even in darkness, God remains.

    Thus, there is no division:

    No separation between work and worship.
    No separation between action and devotion.
    No separation between the dream and the Divine.

    The weak man seeks to escape the world.
    The warrior enters it fully—yet belongs only to God.

    Know this:

    You are in a dream, but the dream is your training ground.
    You have duties, but they are your discipline.
    You meet others, but you meet only Him.

    Walk this path without hesitation.

    Rise when it is time to rise.
    Act when it is time to act.
    Remember when you forget.
    And offer all things—success and failure alike—into the hands of the One who was always the Doer.

    This is the way of the spiritual warrior: To live in the world of illusion,
    yet never again be fooled by it.


  • THE KINGDOM OF THIS MOMENT

    “And as we learn to choose rightly between the dualities of good and evil, eventually we rise above both, and attain that state which Jesus and Krishna and the Masters attained — the state of EVENMINDEDNESS, living always in the bliss-consciousness of God in which no dualities can distress or upset us.”

    Yogananda, Paramahansa. Solving the Mystery of Life: Collected Talks & Essays on Realizing God in Daily Life Volume IV (pp. 271-272). Self-Realization Fellowship. Kindle Edition.


    It is alright right where I am.
    Not as resignation. Not as defeat.
    But as a declaration of sovereignty.

    The world howls otherwise. It measures, compares, demands. It points endlessly toward a horizon that recedes with every step—more money, more status, more proof that you have earned your place among the restless. It whispers that peace is conditional, that fulfillment is deferred, that your life is a negotiation with the future.

    It feeds on desire—endless, restless desire—promising that the next acquisition, the next achievement, the next moment will finally complete you. But desire, untethered from truth, is a mirage. It shines in the distance, convincing you to walk farther, strive harder, become more—only to dissolve when you arrive, replaced by another shimmering promise just beyond reach.

    But the deeper truth stands unmoved.

    It is alright right where I am.

    If it changes, if it improves, if the winds turn favorable and fortune smiles—then it is alright then also. Not more alright. Not finally acceptable. Just… alright, again. Because the foundation was never built on circumstance. It was built on presence.

    And if things become worse—if the sky darkens, if loss arrives, if the ground beneath you trembles—it is still alright. Not because suffering is denied, but because something deeper than circumstance remains untouched. There is a ground beneath all ground, and it does not collapse.

    That ground is not empty. It is alive.

    It is the presence of God.

    As Eckhart Tolle said, “Don’t let a mad world tell you that success is anything other than a successful present moment.” But the successful present moment is not merely awareness—it is remembrance. It is the turning of the heart toward God within the now.

    A moment becomes truly successful when it is inhabited consciously—and offered upward. When the breath itself becomes prayer. When attention becomes devotion. When you are not just present, but present with God.

    And in that presence, the illusion of desire begins to fall away.

    You see it clearly—the mind reaching, grasping, insisting: “If only I had this… if only things were different… then I would be at peace.” But in the light of awareness, you recognize the pattern. Desire promises completion, but it perpetuates absence. It keeps you leaning forward, away from the only place God can be known—the present moment.

    This is the hidden fire.

    To be mindful of God in this very moment—to remember, to love, to surrender—is to transform ordinary time into sacred ground. The battlefield becomes an altar. The struggle becomes an offering. The silence becomes communion.

    Because the truth is this: the “mad world” is not just out there. It is internalized. It lives in the voice that says, “Not yet. Not enough. Not until…” It pulls you away from God by pulling you away from now, dressing its urgency in the language of desire.

    But the spiritual warrior returns.

    Again and again, he returns.

    Not to the next desire—but to its dissolution.
    Not to the illusion—but to the real.

    To the breath.
    To the moment.
    To God.

    He does not wait for perfect conditions to remember. He remembers in chaos. He remembers in stillness. He remembers in joy and in pain. He remembers when life rises—and when it falls apart. And when desire arises, he does not become its servant—he becomes its witness, letting it pass like a cloud that cannot anchor him.

    And in that remembrance, he stands unshaken.

    Because this breath is not empty—it is given.
    This moment is not random—it is permitted.
    This life is not owned—it is entrusted.

    And so he stands.

    In traffic, and remembers God.
    In silence, and remembers God.
    In uncertainty, and remembers God.
    In suffering, and remembers God.
    In blessing, and remembers God.

    And he says, It is alright.

    Not because everything is ideal—but because God is here. Not because desire has been fulfilled—but because its illusion has been seen through. Not because the path is easy—but because he does not walk it alone.

    From that alignment, something extraordinary happens. Action becomes clean. Effort becomes focused. Desire, purified, is no longer a chain—it becomes intention aligned with truth. Change, when it comes, is no longer a desperate grasp but a movement guided by trust. Improvement is welcomed—but not worshipped. Difficulty is endured—but not feared.

    Because the foundation remains unchanged:

    It is alright right where I am.
    If it improves, it is alright.
    If it worsens, it is still alright.
    If I remember God in this moment—this moment is successful.

    This is not passivity. This is devotion.
    This is not complacency. This is communion.
    This is not escape. This is union.

    To master the present moment is to sanctify it—to fill it with awareness, to free it from the illusion of desire, and to offer that awareness back to its source. And in that sacred exchange, success is no longer something you chase—it is something you live.

    Right here.
    Right now.
    With God.
    Already.


  • THE DIVINE CODE: CONSCIOUSNESS, THE HOLY TRINITY, AND INDRA’S NET!

    “We are made of the matrix of consciousness. All life was spumed out of the one Source of the river of consciousness.”

    — Paramahansa Yogananda


    Some parts of this article are adapted from the talk Everything is Consciousness by Nayaswami Jyotish, linked below.


    At the heart of all spiritual realization lies one profound truth: everything is consciousness. Before there were stars, galaxies, or even thought itself, there was consciousness—unbounded, unconditioned, divine awareness.

    This consciousness is not merely a backdrop to existence; it is existence. It is both the observer and the observed, the dreamer and the dream.

    This is the root of God.


    🌌 Consciousness as the Root of God

    God is not an external creator manipulating the cosmos from afar. Rather, God is pure consciousness, the essence and substratum of all things. As shared in a profound teaching:

    All of existence is simply consciousness. Yet God, in divine play, veils this truth, making it seem otherwise. This illusion — this seeming separation — is known as maya.

    In the grand illusion of maya, we perceive duality, division, and difference. But behind the veil of form and phenomena lies a single source — God as pure awareness, manifesting the universe by condensing that consciousness into various levels of reality.


    🕊️ The Divine Architecture: Holy Trinity and the Three Worlds

    God’s consciousness, when projected outward, gives rise to a divine architecture — a holy trinity that mirrors both Christian and Vedic teachings.

    In Christian theology, the Holy Trinity is:

    • God the Father – The unmanifest Source, the Infinite Consciousness.
    • God the Holy Spirit (Divine Mother) – The creative vibration, Aum, the breath, the power that animates and sustains creation. God as the creation.
    • God the Son – The divine intelligence made manifest as a true Son or Daughter within the creation, the Christ Consciousness (Buddha consciousness, Krishna consciousness) that is dormant in most beings.

    In Vedic cosmology, a strikingly similar structure exists:

    • Causal World – The realm of thought and pure ideation, the first condensation of consciousness
    • Astral World – The energetic world of light and vibration, the domain of subtle form and feeling
    • Physical World – The densest layer, where energy crystallizes into matter and form

    As taught by the Rishis:

    God, as pure consciousness, begins creation by gently condensing His essence into thought — this gives rise to the causal realm. From there, to express creation in more tangible form, the astral world of energy emerges. Finally, this divine impulse crystallizes into the physical world, the realm of matter and the senses.

    This isn’t merely theology; it’s a map of existence, showing how spirit becomes matter and how the many arise from the One.


    💎 Indra’s Net: The Cosmic Weave of Divine Reflection

    Enter Indra’s Net, a luminous vision from Hindu and Buddhist philosophy — perhaps the most poetic and comprehensive model of God’s immanence and transcendence.

    Imagine a cosmic web of infinite jewels, stretching across all space and time. Each jewel reflects every other jewel. Every reflection contains the whole.

    This is not a metaphor for egoic individuality — it’s a vision of divine multiplicity within unity:

    • Each individual consciousness contains the whole.
    • Every soul is God in microcosm, not separate from but essential to the whole.
    • Divine intelligence flows through everything, without diminishing individuality or unity.

    Indra’s Net teaches that enlightenment is the realization that you are both the jewel and the net — a unique expression of God, yet indivisibly part of the All.

    As Christ said,

    “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vine grower.” (John 15:1)

    Each jewel is a grape on the vine, nourished by the same divine sap. Each reflection is Christ Consciousness mirrored through the many facets of creation.


    🧬 You Are the Architecture

    You are not separate from this divine architecture — you are its essence. Your soul transcends all realms, expressing through the causal body in the realm of divine thought, flowing through the astral body of light and energy, and manifesting through the physical body in the world of action and form.

    You are a jewel in Indra’s Net, eternally reflecting and being reflected.

    And you are the child of the Holy Trinity, born of Infinite Consciousness, shaped by Divine Intelligence, and filled with the breath of Spirit.


    ✨ Conclusion: Realizing Your Divine Nature

    To awaken is to remember:

    • You are consciousness.
    • You are God’s thought in motion.
    • You are the reflection of the Infinite in a single radiant point.

    Let your life be a conscious reflection of the divine. Recognize the net within the jewel. See God in all things, and all things in God. This is the highest realization. This is your true nature.


    Live as the jewel. Love as the net. Shine as the light of consciousness.


    Sifu Russo’s works are a collaboration between AI tools such as ChatGPT and himself.

    MORE INFORMATION:

    Everything is Consciousness by Nayaswami Jyotish, disciple of Paramhansa Yogananda