There you are again! Boy oh boy, fear is kicking my behind. i've been fearless for decades, until the last couple of years, now I'm drowning in fear. Just wow. I think I'm in my finals to prove I've learned what I came here for. Extremely difficult. Hugs Christian.
Christian, as always I am shocked by your authenticity in presenting the ineffable so beautifully that it becomes recognizable as my home. The seeming contradiction of the shared existence of the All and my particularity is the root paradox that has haunted me for decades. The Rumi quote always escaped me until you gave me permission to let go of the apparently “impossible” paradoxes of duality and non-duality, allowing me to (occasionally) relax into love. Relaxing into love feels like the complete opposite of the desperation with which I tried to “think” myself to love. What a gift! Thank you.
Thank-you for all the detailed information❣️ It is all very eye-opening. I‘m so glad someone in the comments on another channel mentioned your name and your pre-birth experience! So far I learned a lot about triggering, healing, meditating, allowing/surrendering, stillness, my true self, and a lot more over the past couple of years. Things have happened that caused me to loose my job. First I was worried how to make a living and pay my bills, but by now I‘ve completely overcome that fear - I‘m happy to say! Still, I have this fear of pain, specifically being hurt by wild boars (or loose dogs) that have settled a few years ago in the forest where I love to hike. I‘m now carrying a bell to keep them away or try to avoid lonely paths were no one else goes. How can I approach this fear? Through meditating, going to those dangerous areas intentionally, telling myself “what‘s meant to be, will be (anyway)“ ….? Your advice is very much appreciated 🙏❗️
@@merletanaka5173 He talks very often about "the bear in the Woods" and how you work with Fear. Also always bear in Mind, nothing here is truly real - everything is virtual. Everything. " Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one" albert einstein
I love Christian . I would love to hear him explain HOW he is so sure what he dealt with wasn’t a hallucination or coping mechanism of his mind . I mean that with no disrespect either . Quite the oppposite as his message resonates so truly and profoundly with the soul . One has to wonder if it’s real though ?😊
At the level of being at which this experience occurs, which is deeper than all Earthly form (form meaning thinking or sensory experience), the veracity and realness is completely self-evident. Metaphorically it would be like if you watched a tiny black and white TV your whole life and then suddenly watched an IMAX movie. Or if you lived in a cave your whole life and then stepped out and saw the sky with your own eyes. It doesn't matter if someone stuck in the cave then says "You have no proof there is a sky," because you have seen it yourself. These metaphors are limited because of course they are based on sensory experience, whereas the knowing of the soul is completely and totally complete, much deeper, and many trillions of times larger than the tiny computing power of the slow local thinking human mind. Never-the-less, I never ask anyone to believe what I am saying, but rather, I encourage if interested to go find out for yourself. Consider a long term meditation practice as a form of objective investigation: Just go see what you are, beneath all thoughts. Don't settle for thoughts, don't settle for stories or slow human analysis: go see, experientially. I hope this helps!
This free will thing is complex because we have the subconscious part running personality programs of limitation in auto pilot. It is a very restricted free will.
As we evolve towards full self awareness and love, the content of that which is "subconscious" decreases significantly, or even vanishes. While we have fear, subconscious remains. All we have to do though is deal with what has arisen, what is in front of us, what we recognize about ourselves or our situation at this moment. In other words, it's okay that the subconscious may exist. That doesn't prevent a quality of intention right now, with whatever has arisen or with whatever state of self-awareness we are experiencing. As ego and fear are faced and healed, and as loving and free intention is wielded instead, self-awareness will increase. I hope that helps!
I like Christians video and his book, but I wish he would explain more clearly what he means by integrate. I'll bet a lot of people want to do better with their lives and take his advice, but we don't know what he means by integrating. If only he could explain it to us more clearly. When trouble and pain comes in your life, you're supposed to just drop your guard and not defend yourself, earn a living, etcetera? Is that what he means by integrating?
Thank you for your kindness! I've thought a lot about how to describe what it means to integrate experience, but this is exceptionally difficult to speak to in a categorical way. Integration of something is a full assimilation and personal "working through" of the experience, and choosing to meet (and thus then being *able* to meet) any given experience with a quality of intention that is aligned with love, peace, joy, and freedom (our true nature), rather than fear and ego. It is fully coming to terms with something, fully assimilating it into what one is. Since each individual is so unique, and since the challenges we may each face vary so much, the process for how we each integrate what we experience here cannot be easily summarized. Love calls us to all sorts of responses: surrender, perseverance, personal ownership, or bravery, just to name a few. It is not about "supposed to's": we are here not to learn a behavior response, but rather to develop the actual quality of our intention (and intention equals action). Below I will also paste a short excerpt from Part 3 of A Walk in the Physical in case it helps. In the meantime: regarding any given experience, what does your wise intuition say? How is it calling you to respond? What do you need to do to fully come to terms with it, own it, and assimilate it, rather than reject it? What can you choose- whether that choice is easy or hard- to align more with freedom, joy, compassion, and love? One's intuition can say far more than what any external person can. I hope that helps, at least a little! If not please hone me in. -Christian The promised excerpt: Q: You say we are here to integrate experience. What does that mean? -- To integrate an experience is to fully know it and assimilate it into what one is, so that one fully “gets it” at the being level (not just the intellectual level). When an experience is fully integrated, it no longer prompts fear. An integrated experience is one in which the individual can comfortably say with familiarity “oh yeah, I’ve been there, done that!” As a single very simple example: When my father was a child, he used to be afraid of his closet. Every night he would lie in bed, tormented by his own imagined fears about what the closet might contain. Eventually he concluded that whatever was in the closet, it couldn’t be worse to experience than the fear itself. So one night he got up from bed, pushed his way into the closet with determination, and sat down on the floor. Nothing happened. He realized that there was no real danger- it had all been imagined. Having gone and done that for himself, he was no longer afraid of closets. Physical reality can be a bit like this: We experience fear as we impose our own negative meaning on our unrelenting and often painful experience of separation, and then eventually, after we are sick of being afraid and suffering, we face those fears head on. Once we do, we have been “been there, done that” - and we are no longer afraid. While fear can be a sign of un-integrated experience, integrating experience does not always involve fear. Learning a skill, becoming familiar with a way of living, or performing a certain role are also types of experience integration. Just about every experience we have in the world of form is always contributing towards its integration (even if in the very long term). Integrating experience is what we do, so it is happening constantly.
I eagerly search you tube for Christian's latest interview or talk!
There you are again! Boy oh boy, fear is kicking my behind. i've been fearless for decades, until the last couple of years, now I'm drowning in fear. Just wow. I think I'm in my finals to prove I've learned what I came here for. Extremely difficult. Hugs Christian.
Christian is the best.. His words always resonate with me
Christian, I love this message I love you for showing up and bringing this message again and again and again thank you!
Christian, as always I am shocked by your authenticity in presenting the ineffable so beautifully that it becomes recognizable as my home. The seeming contradiction of the shared existence of the All and my particularity is the root paradox that has haunted me for decades. The Rumi quote always escaped me until you gave me permission to let go of the apparently “impossible” paradoxes of duality and non-duality, allowing me to (occasionally) relax into love. Relaxing into love feels like the complete opposite of the desperation with which I tried to “think” myself to love. What a gift! Thank you.
Amazing! Life Changing! Brilliant!! Thank you Christian!!
Christian, thank you so much!
So well explained and captivating and inspiring- thank you 🙏
Perfectly clear and well stated Christian!
He is amazing
Thank You Christian! 🙏 ❤
Thank-you for all the detailed information❣️
It is all very eye-opening.
I‘m so glad someone in the comments on another channel mentioned your name and your pre-birth experience!
So far I learned a lot about triggering, healing, meditating, allowing/surrendering, stillness, my true self, and a lot more over the past couple of years.
Things have happened that caused me to loose my job. First I was worried how to make a living and pay my bills, but by now I‘ve completely overcome that fear - I‘m happy to say!
Still, I have this fear of pain, specifically being hurt by wild boars (or loose dogs) that have settled a few years ago in the forest where I love to hike.
I‘m now carrying a bell to keep them away or try to avoid lonely paths were no one else goes.
How can I approach this fear?
Through meditating, going to those dangerous areas intentionally, telling myself “what‘s meant to be, will be (anyway)“ ….?
Your advice is very much appreciated 🙏❗️
Check out tom campbell, he is the one who inspired christian sundberg !
@@fragtthorsten9059 Thank-you ❣️ Actually I‘ve been watching Tom Campbell recently! Will go look for an answer in his work!
@@merletanaka5173 He talks very often about "the bear in the Woods" and how you work with Fear. Also always bear in Mind, nothing here is truly real - everything is virtual. Everything.
" Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one"
albert einstein
This is incredible
Gold.
This how I present a " fast course" in how it ALL works. Life death and love. Both here on earth and everywhere.
My english is limited. 😂
I love Christian . I would love to hear him explain HOW he is so sure what he dealt with wasn’t a hallucination or coping mechanism of his mind . I mean that with no disrespect either . Quite the oppposite as his message resonates so truly and profoundly with the soul . One has to wonder if it’s real though ?😊
At the level of being at which this experience occurs, which is deeper than all Earthly form (form meaning thinking or sensory experience), the veracity and realness is completely self-evident. Metaphorically it would be like if you watched a tiny black and white TV your whole life and then suddenly watched an IMAX movie. Or if you lived in a cave your whole life and then stepped out and saw the sky with your own eyes. It doesn't matter if someone stuck in the cave then says "You have no proof there is a sky," because you have seen it yourself. These metaphors are limited because of course they are based on sensory experience, whereas the knowing of the soul is completely and totally complete, much deeper, and many trillions of times larger than the tiny computing power of the slow local thinking human mind. Never-the-less, I never ask anyone to believe what I am saying, but rather, I encourage if interested to go find out for yourself. Consider a long term meditation practice as a form of objective investigation: Just go see what you are, beneath all thoughts. Don't settle for thoughts, don't settle for stories or slow human analysis: go see, experientially. I hope this helps!
This free will thing is complex because we have the subconscious part running personality programs of limitation in auto pilot. It is a very restricted free will.
As we evolve towards full self awareness and love, the content of that which is "subconscious" decreases significantly, or even vanishes. While we have fear, subconscious remains. All we have to do though is deal with what has arisen, what is in front of us, what we recognize about ourselves or our situation at this moment. In other words, it's okay that the subconscious may exist. That doesn't prevent a quality of intention right now, with whatever has arisen or with whatever state of self-awareness we are experiencing. As ego and fear are faced and healed, and as loving and free intention is wielded instead, self-awareness will increase. I hope that helps!
@@AWalkinthePhysical It does help. Much love and thanks
I like Christians video and his book, but I wish he would explain more clearly what he means by integrate. I'll bet a lot of people want to do better with their lives and take his advice, but we don't know what he means by integrating. If only he could explain it to us more clearly. When trouble and pain comes in your life, you're supposed to just drop your guard and not defend yourself, earn a living, etcetera? Is that what he means by integrating?
Thank you for your kindness! I've thought a lot about how to describe what it means to integrate experience, but this is exceptionally difficult to speak to in a categorical way. Integration of something is a full assimilation and personal "working through" of the experience, and choosing to meet (and thus then being *able* to meet) any given experience with a quality of intention that is aligned with love, peace, joy, and freedom (our true nature), rather than fear and ego. It is fully coming to terms with something, fully assimilating it into what one is. Since each individual is so unique, and since the challenges we may each face vary so much, the process for how we each integrate what we experience here cannot be easily summarized. Love calls us to all sorts of responses: surrender, perseverance, personal ownership, or bravery, just to name a few. It is not about "supposed to's": we are here not to learn a behavior response, but rather to develop the actual quality of our intention (and intention equals action).
Below I will also paste a short excerpt from Part 3 of A Walk in the Physical in case it helps.
In the meantime: regarding any given experience, what does your wise intuition say? How is it calling you to respond? What do you need to do to fully come to terms with it, own it, and assimilate it, rather than reject it? What can you choose- whether that choice is easy or hard- to align more with freedom, joy, compassion, and love? One's intuition can say far more than what any external person can. I hope that helps, at least a little! If not please hone me in. -Christian
The promised excerpt:
Q: You say we are here to integrate experience. What does that mean? --
To integrate an experience is to fully know it and assimilate it into what one is, so that one fully “gets it” at the being level (not just the intellectual level). When an experience is fully integrated, it no longer prompts fear. An integrated experience is one in which the individual can comfortably say with familiarity “oh yeah, I’ve been there, done that!”
As a single very simple example: When my father was a child, he used to be afraid of his closet. Every night he would lie in bed, tormented by his own imagined fears about what the closet might contain. Eventually he concluded that whatever was in the closet, it couldn’t be worse to experience than the fear itself. So one night he got up from bed, pushed his way into the closet with determination, and sat down on the floor. Nothing happened. He realized that there was no real danger- it had all been imagined. Having gone and done that for himself, he was no longer afraid of closets. Physical reality can be a bit like this: We experience fear as we impose our own negative meaning on our unrelenting and often painful experience of separation, and then eventually, after we are sick of being afraid and suffering, we face those fears head on. Once we do, we have been “been there, done that” - and we are no longer afraid.
While fear can be a sign of un-integrated experience, integrating experience does not always involve fear. Learning a skill, becoming familiar with a way of living, or performing a certain role are also types of experience integration. Just about every experience we have in the world of form is always contributing towards its integration (even if in the very long term). Integrating experience is what we do, so it is happening constantly.
It's interesting the proportions he puts forward but we have serious backwardness around us just now. I don't see progress or much sign of it.