It was a conversation that stayed with me.
We were
sitting in a quiet corner after a gathering, the kind where the noise has faded,
but the thoughts are just getting started. Someone leaned in and said, almost
with a sense of relief, “I don’t think so much anymore. I feel. I trust. It’s…
freeing.”
And I
understood exactly what they meant.
There comes
a point for many people, often later in life, but not always, when something
shifts. The constant need to analyze, to solve, to prove, to make everything
fit neatly into logic and reason… it softens. A different kind of awareness
begins to take its place. Call it spiritual awareness, presence, or simply a
deeper way of being.
It can feel
like stepping out of a crowded room into open air.
You notice
more. You react less. You begin to trust moments instead of dissecting them.
You feel connected to people, to nature, to something larger than yourself. And
yes, there is a freedom in that. A lightness.
But here’s
where I find myself pausing.
Because
sometimes, in that movement toward spiritual awareness, people quietly set
something down along the way.
Their
tools.
Intellect.
Logic. Common sense.
Almost as
if those things belonged to an earlier version of themselves, one they’ve now
outgrown.
And that’s
where I gently push back.
Not because
the shift toward awareness isn’t real, it absolutely is. But because those
tools were never the enemy. They were never meant to be discarded. They were
meant to be refined… and then reunited with this new way of seeing.
Think of it
this way.
Imagine
someone who has spent years learning to navigate the world with a map. Every
road, every turn, carefully studied. Then one day, they discover something new,
and they begin to feel their way. They sense direction. They move with
intuition instead of strict planning.
That’s
growth.
But if they
throw away the map entirely? They may feel free for a while… until they’re lost
in a place where intuition alone isn’t enough.
The real
mastery comes when they carry both.
They feel
the direction… and they understand the terrain.
That’s the
balance I’m talking about.
Spiritual
awareness can open doors that logic alone cannot. It allows us to sit with
uncertainty without panic. It helps us see meaning where before we saw only
randomness. It deepens our compassion, our patience, our ability to be present.
But
intellect, logic, and common sense are grounding forces.
They help
us ask better questions.
They help us test what we believe.
They help us act wisely, not just feel deeply.
Without
them, awareness can drift. It can become vague, untethered, even misleading.
With them,
awareness becomes powerful.
I’ve seen
people on both sides of this.
Some who
stayed so firmly rooted in logic that they never allowed themselves to
experience the richness of deeper awareness. Everything had to be explained,
measured, and proven. Life became narrow, even if it was orderly.
And others
who leaned so far into spiritual feeling that they lost their footing.
Everything became “energy” or “intuition,” but decisions lacked clarity.
Boundaries blurred. Reality became harder to navigate.
But then some
find the middle path.
And it’s
something to see.
They think
clearly, but not rigidly.
They feel deeply, but not blindly.
They question, but without cynicism.
They trust, but without abandoning discernment.
There’s a
steadiness to them.
Their
growth doesn’t just accelerate, it stabilizes. Their “blossoming” doesn’t just
happen; it deepens.
And here’s
the part that excites me the most:
When people
rediscover their tools after expanding their awareness, something remarkable
happens.
Their
thinking becomes more insightful, not just analytical.
Their logic becomes more compassionate, not just correct.
Their common sense becomes more inclusive, not just practical.
It’s as if
the tools themselves have evolved.
And so has
the person using them.
I sometimes
picture it like a garden.
At first,
we focus on structure, planting rows, understanding soil, learning what works
and what doesn’t. That’s our logic, our learning, our effort to make sense of
things.
Then, over
time, we begin to appreciate the flow of the garden. The seasons. The way
things grow in their own time. The beauty that isn’t entirely controlled.
That’s our awareness, our openness, our connection.
But the
most beautiful gardens?
They have
both.
They are
tended with care and allowed to grow with freedom.
So, if
you’re on that path, if you’re feeling that shift toward something deeper,
something more expansive, embrace it. There is real growth there.
But don’t
leave your tools behind.
Bring them
with you.
Sharpen
them with your new awareness. Soften them with your new understanding. Use them
not to control life, but to engage with it more fully.
Because the
goal isn’t to choose between thinking and feeling.
It’s to
integrate them.
And when
that happens, a different kind of freedom emerges.
Not just
the freedom of letting go… but the freedom of knowing when to hold on.
Not just
the freedom of drifting… but the freedom of direction.
And in that
space, something truly powerful takes root.
Your
awareness grows.
Your insight deepens.
Your balance strengthens.
And yes, your
blossoming… blossoms.