Why do we always assume that the version of ourselves that needs saving is the one qualified to pick the rescue plan? It is a peculiar sort of arrogance, one I am certainly guilty of, to think that the unawakened mind can accurately map out the geography of its own awakening. We treat spiritual growth like a home renovation project. We look at the blueprints, choose the marble countertops of “inner peace,” and decide that the version of ourselves will look quite good standing in the newly liberated kitchen of the soul.
The Blueprint of a Stranger
Catalina sat on her floor last Tuesday, peeling back the crusty edges of a vision board she had fashioned with great earnestness seven years ago. The board was a collage of aspirations that now felt like a message from a stranger. There were pictures of women in white linen, standing on cliffsides with their eyes closed, looking remarkably unbothered by the wind. There were words clipped from magazines in elegant sans-serif fonts: Bliss. Freedom. Expansion. Enlightenment.
Catalina counted exactly 47 goals on the back of her board, ranging from “daily meditation” to “living in the flow.”
Looking at it now, she didn’t feel like the woman on the cliff. She felt like someone who had survived a very slow, very confusing car wreck. Her life was nothing like the board. She wasn’t wearing white linen; she was wearing an old sweatshirt with a coffee stain that looked vaguely like South America. She wasn’t standing on a cliff; she was in a two-bedroom apartment where the radiator clanked every .
And yet, as she looked at the “bliss” she had once craved, she started to laugh. It wasn’t a cynical laugh. It was the laugh of someone who had been promised a plastic toy and ended up with a real, breathing, messy heart.
It was a destination she could buy in 7 installments of $197. It was a version of reality where her personality stayed exactly the same, but all the “bad” feelings were swapped out for “good” ones. She wanted the version of awakening that the industry sells-the one that fits neatly into a Sunday afternoon schedule and doesn’t require you to actually lose anything you aren’t already prepared to throw away.
The Clean Room Paradox
Arjun V., a clean room technician who spends his days obsessed with parts-per-million, knows a lot about the illusion of control. He works in an environment where even a single stray skin cell can ruin a $777,000 batch of microchips. Arjun spends his life fighting the invisible.
Protocol Check
Specific gowning steps to reach the “clean zone”
He once told me that the hardest part of the job isn’t the technical skill; it’s the constant realization that no matter how hard you scrub, the world is fundamentally composed of “contaminants.”
He cleans his phone screen with a 97 percent isopropyl alcohol solution three times a day, a habit that has bled over from his professional life into his private neurosis. Arjun looks at the spiritual marketplace and sees a bunch of people trying to build “clean rooms” for their minds.
“You cannot ISO-certify the soul. You can’t gown up enough to keep the grit of being human from getting into the machinery of your enlightenment.”
– Arjun V.
The Foreseeable Outcome
I’ve spent a lot of time criticizing the modern spiritual industrial complex, only to find myself buying a 227-page book on “minimalist mindfulness” the very next day. We are suckers for the Foreseeable Outcome. We want to know what we are getting.
But every serious tradition, the ones that haven’t been distilled into a lukewarm tea for mass consumption, tells us the same thing: the seeker’s image of the destination is the first thing that has to go. If you can imagine it, it’s not it. Your imagination is built out of the materials of your current cage. Using your imagination to visualize enlightenment is like using the bars of your cell to build a ladder; you’re still just rearranging the prison.
The modern industry’s commitment to selling the destination you imagine is actually a structural barrier to the real thing. They sell you “The Path to Joy” because they know you like joy. They don’t sell you “The Path to the Total Dissolution of Everything You Think Makes You Special,” because that has a very low conversion rate on Instagram. But the latter is usually what shows up.
Melting the Computer
Real transformation is inherently unforeseeable. If it were foreseeable, it wouldn’t be transformation; it would just be an upgrade. An upgrade is when your ego gets a faster processor and a better interface. Transformation is when the computer melts and you realize you were the electricity all along.
A faster processor for the existing ego.
The computer melts; you become the power.
Catalina’s vision board was a blueprint for a better ego. The life she actually has-the one where she had to navigate a divorce, a career change that felt like a failure for , and the slow, grueling work of learning to like herself when she wasn’t “succeeding”-is the real awakening.
She realized that “bliss” was a very thin, very fragile concept compared to the “integrity” she had actually found. Integrity doesn’t always feel good. Sometimes integrity feels like saying no to a lucrative job that would kill your spirit. Sometimes it feels like sitting in the 7:00 PM dark and admitting you were wrong.
Throwing the GPS Away
We are often told that the path is a straight line, or perhaps a spiral. In reality, it looks more like getting lost in a forest and realizing, after of panic, that the forest is your home. The spiritual industry wants to give you a GPS and a pre-packed lunch.
But the GPS only works on the roads they built. To get to the “unseen” places, you have to throw the GPS out the window. This is the honest, surprise-honoring approach that organizations like the
try to preserve. They understand that the “unseen” isn’t a mystery to be solved, but a reality to be inhabited, often at the cost of our most cherished certainties.
The Beauty of the Breach
Arjun V. once described a “breach” in the clean room. A seal failed, and the outside air rushed in. For a moment, the technicians panicked. Everything was contaminated. The 77 sensors in the room went red.
STATUS: CONTAMINATED (77 SENSORS RED)
But Arjun said he felt a strange sense of relief. For that one minute, he didn’t have to be a sterile ghost in a white suit. He could just breathe. The “perfection” was gone, but the air was real. Most of us are terrified of that breach. we spend $497 on crystals and $27 on apps to keep the “outside air” of suffering and confusion from contaminating our spiritual clean room.
We want to be “high vibe” because we think that if we vibrate fast enough, the heavy stuff won’t be able to stick to us. But the heavy stuff is the gravity that keeps us on the planet.
The Guy with the Noisy Nose
I remember a specific morning in when I tried to meditate for and ended up just thinking about how much I hated the sound of my own breathing. I felt like a spiritual failure. I wasn’t “expanding.” I was just a guy in a chair with a noisy nose.
I wanted the awakening where I became a shimmering being of light. What I got, years later, was the awakening where I realized that being a guy in a chair with a noisy nose is actually quite a miracle, provided you stop wishing you were a shimmering being of light.
The 87 percent of our spiritual frustration comes from the gap between the “Enlightenmentâ„¢” we were promised and the “Reality” we are experiencing. We think the gap is our fault. We think we aren’t doing the breathwork right, or we haven’t cleared enough ancestral trauma, or we need to attend one more $1,207 retreat in Tulum.
SPIRITUAL FRUSTRATION RATE
87%
Data point: The percentage of spiritual energy spent mourning the “ideal” self.
We don’t realize that the gap is the path. It’s the ego’s grip slipping. Catalina eventually took the vision board and put it in the recycling bin. Not because she was angry, but because she didn’t need the map anymore. She was already in the territory.
Hearts and Radiators
She noticed that the coffee stain on her sweatshirt actually looked more like a heart than South America if she tilted her head 17 degrees. She noticed that the radiator clanked in a rhythm that felt like a heartbeat.
The awakening she wanted in was a shield. She wanted to be so enlightened that life couldn’t hurt her anymore. The awakening she got was a softening. She is now so open that life can move right through her. It hurts more, but it also feels more.
She is no longer the woman on the cliff in white linen. She is the woman in the stained sweatshirt, sitting on a floor that needs vacuuming, feeling a quiet, steady sense of “yes” that the vision board never could have captured.
The Honesty of a Fingerprint
It’s a strange thing to realize that your dreams were too small. We think our spiritual aspirations are “big,” but they are usually just “shiny.” Real awakening is much bigger than bliss. It’s large enough to include sorrow, boredom, and the 137 mundane tasks we have to do every day. It’s large enough to include Arjun’s obsessive screen cleaning and Catalina’s clanking radiator.
If you are looking back at your own and feeling like you missed the boat, consider the possibility that you didn’t miss the boat-you just stopped trying to steer it. The destination you imagined was a postcard. The place you are standing is the world. It’s dirtier, louder, and much less predictable than the brochure, but it’s the only place where you can actually breathe.
The path isn’t about becoming someone else. It’s about the slow, often painful process of failing to be the person you thought you should be, until only the truth remains. And the truth, as it turns out, doesn’t care about your vision board. It’s much more interested in the way you hold your coffee cup right now.
Looking at the clock, I realize I’ve been staring at my own screen for . It’s slightly smudged. I think about Arjun and his isopropyl alcohol. I decide to leave the smudge. There is something honest about a fingerprint. It’s a mark of contact. It’s a reminder that I was here, touching the world, instead of just looking at a clean, sterile image of it.
We spend so much energy trying to polish the glass that we forget the whole point of the glass is to see through it. We wanted the awakening that would fix our lives. We got the one that showed us our lives weren’t broken, just unfinished. And that is a much better gift, even if it doesn’t look good on a vision board.