The Telepathic Arts: Telepathy is not Arbitrary
Telepathy, is not arbitrary.
It is not simply one mind reaching into another. It is not for my advantage, nor for the advantage of someone else. The connection itself has reason, structure, alignment. To discover why two beings become connected—that is the true mystery. Telepathically you see the connection as simply looking at another person, in the psychic strata where there isnt the obvious connection of looking at the person in front of you, you have to ponder.
In one sense, it resembles an exchange between a customer and a seller, something almost physical in nature. There is movement. Reciprocity. Convergence. But if telepathy is reduced merely to personal development, then its greater architecture remains unseen.
See all lives as conduits—like tunnels.
Your life possesses a consciousness to it. The events you experience, the thoughts you carry, the suffering you endure, the disciplines you cultivate—these form the walls of the tunnel itself. And when your life aligns with another’s, whether here, elsewhere, now, in the past, or perhaps even beyond this world, a connection occurs.
Not randomly.
But through correspondence.
Consider even the possibility of those outside this planet. How would your life, your experiences, your exact moment of realization align with another intelligence elsewhere unless there existed some deeper regulation, some architecture of convergence already woven into existence itself?
And because telepathy is not arbitrary, you can look through scripture, myth, and history and begin to see why certain figures continue to echo through humanity across time.
Take the Buddha, for example.
He discovered suffering—not merely as a personal condition, but as a universal connective principle. He encountered something all beings share. And because he found not only suffering, but a way through it, his realization became a permanent connection point within human consciousness.
That is why, even now, you hear the Buddha.
His realization continues to resonate because it touched something inherent to us all.
And perhaps the same can occur elsewhere.
A person may discover another universal principle—something overlooked, something foundational, something tied to existence itself—and through that discovery create another enduring point of convergence within consciousness.
But there is danger here as well.
For if your awareness aligns itself with destruction, domination, or collapse, then you may begin resonating with those same forces throughout history and myth. You may suddenly understand why figures associated with destruction, judgment, or dissolution emerge within human consciousness again and again.
Perhaps this is why Shiva appears—not merely as a deity, but as a realization connected to destruction, transformation, and the terrible necessity of endings.
And perhaps one day you encounter that same threshold yourself.
Hopefully with humility.
Hopefully without arrogance.
Hopefully with enough ignorance remaining within you that you do not mistake your encounter with the infinite for ownership over it.
This, too, was something the awakened ones understood.
But return now to the beginning.
Can you discover something that lasts?
Something meaningful enough to move through time itself?
Something that supports life, clarifies existence, or reveals a hidden principle no one has properly articulated before?
And if you do—what then have you encountered?
A new god?
An old one rediscovered?
An awakening?
Or merely another dream within the architecture of consciousness?
Much has already been explored by those who dedicated their lives to these questions. The ancient minds, the mystics, the philosophers, the saints—they have already traveled deep into these tunnels of convergence.
And one lesson appears repeatedly:
“Unto another” and “unto myself” are not simple distinctions.
Because the moment telepathy becomes centered entirely upon another person—or entirely upon oneself—it begins to turn inward dangerously. The realization itself eventually asks:
“Unto you… or unto myself?”
And if one is not equipped with immense foresight, immense responsibility, and a deep reverence for consequence, they may begin using the lives of others merely as extensions of their own becoming.
That is not awakening.
That is consumption.
The true telepath understands that every realization carries consequence—not only for themselves, but for countless others whose lives may become entangled with that realization across time.
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