No.1

Writing raw from the mind matters — but if the reader cannot follow, the meaning weakens. So let me try to connect these thoughts as clearly as possible. Some wide shifting of ideas will happen. Bear with it.

First — what does it mean to serve all things?

The sun sends energy to Earth through nuclear fusion, via photons. For 4.5 billion years, that energy — combined with gravity, molecules, atoms, particles, and their directionality — has produced what we call “evolution.” But evolution is a human perspective. Objectively, it is simply the precise result of environmental interaction. We are beings that adapt to environment, match it, change with it. When enough time passes, we separate before and after and call it evolution. Removing that bias brings us closer to what is actually happening.

Second — everything is in relationship, right now.

Every molecule, atom, particle, and unit of energy is flowing, changing, influencing and being influenced this very moment. Nothing exists in isolation. Your eyes, thoughts, neurons, the air you breathe, your position — all of it is interconnected beyond imagination. We are not beings who change. We are change itself. Energy vibrating. Relationship. Mutual influence. Everything.

Does the past exist? The word itself is a contradiction. The past is a subjective mode of expression. In the physical world, the past does not exist. What we call memory is a neurological re-enactment — a pattern the brain produces now, not then. Trauma can be triggered, yes — but it is happening now, in this body, as a pattern. Not then.

Does the future exist? No — not as a fixed thing. But because we exist in a state of constant change and relationship, the direction of that change can be influenced. The future is not a place. It is the tendency of what is moving now.

A tree does not think about past or future. It grows according to its patterns and environment — wind direction, pressure, resistance. If blocked, it grows around. If a branch is cut, new growth appears beside it. The tree simply continues, adapting, minimizing resistance. That is all.

Animals, likewise, survive through adaptation. Only those whose patterns matched the environment well enough are here now. We are all living out our patterns — almost perfectly.

Remove the biased lens, and the world is already perfect.

Not “without problems” — that is a misunderstanding of perfection. There is no human word that adequately expresses the perfection of nature. That is why cultures and religions express it through paradox: ordered and perfectly disordered at once. Unrelated and perfectly interconnected at once.

So — what can be helped?

Seen from the whole, even the question of helping appears to be a bias. But if one thing can be changed, and that change can be called help — what is it?

Water does not intend to help. Water simply is — and relationship forms around it naturally. So perhaps existing itself is sufficient. Why is already answered by existence. But How — how to exist — does that matter?

Water freezes when cold, evaporates when hot, flows liquid at the right temperature, follows gravity downward. It responds to its environment completely. Larger forces — gravity, the sun, the moon — shape it far more than smaller ones. The water does not influence the moon. The smaller system does not significantly affect the larger.

So — align with the larger system. That may be everything.

Wake when the sun rises. Sleep when it sets. Eat what the larger environment provides. Move in rhythm with what is given. If that is how one exists — perhaps that is already the highest good.

Then — what is the first stance the body must take?

Throw out every thought and feeling accumulated until now. Be still. If the body knows what to do, it will do it. If it does not seem to know — that is because forced thinking and habituated patterns have buried what was already there. Let them go. All of them.

If fear arises — let it shake. If emptiness comes — let it soak in. If excitement rises — let it move. Leave it all. The body will find its pattern. What we call willpower is unnecessary. Will is already embedded in the body — in every animal, plant, insect, bacteria, virus — wordlessly, without thought. Only humans have lost the trust in what is already inside.

The first act — for the self, and for everything — is to leave it be. All day. Let go. Cry, collapse, feel nothing — let all of it go. Let go so completely that you can no longer recognize who “I” is. Release everything that can be called “I.” Fail at releasing — and release again. Just let go. Release even the wanting to let go.

Be there. Just be there.

That is the first act toward all beings. Toward the world.


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