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Embodiment Is The Lived Experience Of Our True Nature

Jun 28, 2022

Embodiment is the conscious integration of the seemingly separate "self" and the True Self. It is the meeting point between conditioned consciousness and the Divine, where what is realised inwardly begins to be lived outwardly. Embodiment is not about becoming a new or improved version of oneself in order to achieve an outcome, nor is it a form of method acting, where one performs a role in the hope that reality will respond. It is the natural expression of recognising one’s true nature as Love and living from that recognition. From here, the manifestation of our highest timeline unfolds without striving or effort. 

There are many ways we become disconnected from this embodiment in everyday life. Even the pursuit of higher or mystical experiences can create further separation from the truth of who we really are. Often, the self and its emotions are treated as obstacles to awakening, something to transcend or bypass, yet awakening happens through lived experience, not by escaping it. In this way, the body and its senses becomes the vessel or instrument for the divine. Without the body, there would be no felt sense of state, no lived indication of what is actually being held as true. How we move, act and respond through the body reveals the beliefs operating beneath conscious awareness. In awakening, the body, feelings, and perceptions are not a problem to be solved, but an invaluable instrument of truth. 

Embodiment is the integration of the ego self with the True Self. It is not the eradication of the ego, but its inclusion. Many teachings place emphasis on reprogramming the mind, even while claiming that the mind itself is illusory. This creates confusion and often leaves people disoriented. 

Embodiment is what allows insight to become integrated rather than destabilising. It reconnects one with internal guidance, keeps feeling and sensitivity intact, and allows identity to be enacted rather than merely understood. Through embodiment, limiting stories and beliefs can be felt as they arise rather than analysed after the fact. A shift in state is no longer theoretical, but perceptible in posture, sensation, movement and presence.

When embodiment is absent, experience often becomes characterised by mental spiralling, compulsive affirmation, emotional avoidance, dissociation or fixation on outcomes. Life is often lived in imagination rather than in the present moment. Desire becomes fantasy rather than devotion. Validation is sought externally, and circumstances are either manipulated or blamed. The body reflects this fragmentation through tension, fatigue and burnout, lack of care or addictive behaviours. These are not moral failings, but signs of disconnection from the embodiment of our true nature. 

Embodiment is the recognition of our lived experience as a vehicle of manifestation rather than an obstacle to it. It is the lived integration of conditioned identity with True Identity. It is the surface of I AM, the point of contact where Consciousness meets form. Through the body, imagination gains texture and reality becomes navigable. Embodiment is coming home to oneself and living from what is recognised as true.

To be embodied is not to perform divinity, but to be aware of being God as a body. It is the tangible point where state becomes observable. In the same way that changing physical behaviour without meaning is ineffective, imagination without embodiment remains abstract. 

State refers not to mood or thought patterns, but to state of being. It is the identity one is inhabiting. Being is an embodied act. Because the physical world reflects who we are being rather than who we think we are being, transformation occurs more readily through embodiment than through mental control.

Knowing teachings intellectually is not the same as living them. Reading about embodiment does not create embodiment. Awareness must be trained, not through force, but through presence. Meditation can support this, not as an escape from life, but as a way of inhabiting it more fully. Awareness can then be carried into ordinary moments, where embodiment is revealed in how one stands, listens, responds and rests.

An approach to manifestation rooted in embodiment does not deny the body. It listens to it. Thoughts and emotions are not obstacles, but signals guiding awareness deeper into truth. Awakening does not occur through the destruction of the ego, but through the release of resistance to it. Most suffering arises from mistaking what the ego presents for who we are.

Embodiment is not something added on top of awakening. It is awakening lived. It is divine love recognising itself and moving through form.

Love is not found โ€” it is remembered.

To live from Divine Love is not to add something new, but to recognise what has always been present beneath the surface of things.ย This work is an invitation to remain with that recognition, and allow it to shape the way life is lived.

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