Consciousness Isn’t What You Think


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We’ve been asking the wrong question.

For decades—arguably centuries—we’ve tried to locate consciousness the same way we locate everything else: by dissecting it, measuring it, and trying to explain it.

We’ve scanned brains.
Mapped neural pathways.
Tracked electrical impulses firing in real time.

And yet… the one thing we’re trying to understand—the experience of being aware—remains just out of reach.

Because what if consciousness isn’t something we can find?

What if it’s something we’ve been standing in all along?

Look Closer

Modern thinking has trained us to believe that consciousness is a byproduct of the brain—a kind of side effect of complex computation. Neurons fire, patterns emerge, and somehow… awareness appears.

But there’s a problem with that model.

It assumes that consciousness comes after the process.

That thinking creates awareness.

But pause for a moment and look at your own experience.

Before you name something… you’re aware of it.
Before you analyze something… you’re aware of it.
Before a thought even forms… there is already awareness.

So which comes first?

If consciousness were just a product of thinking, then thinking would have to exist before awareness.

But it doesn’t.

Awareness is already there—quiet, constant, and undeniable—before the first thought arrives.

And yet, we’ve built an entire worldview that treats thinking as primary… and being as secondary.

That may be the fundamental error.

Turn It Around

There’s another way to look at this.

Instead of seeing consciousness as something the brain produces, what if we saw it as the field in which all experience happens?

Not an object.
Not a function.
Not a thing.

But the context.

Think about it this way.

Every thought you’ve ever had appears to something.
Every emotion arises within something.
Every perception—sound, sight, sensation—shows up in a kind of open space of awareness.

We don’t usually notice it because we’re so focused on the content.

The thoughts.
The noise.
The story.

But the space in which all of that happens?

That’s consciousness.

And it doesn’t come and go the way thoughts do.

It’s there when you’re focused.
It’s there when your mind is quiet.
It’s there in the middle of chaos… and in moments of stillness.

Which raises a powerful possibility:

Consciousness isn’t something you generate.

It’s something you are participating in.

Notice This

Imagine two people listening to music.

The first is analyzing it.

Breaking down the chords.
Identifying the structure.
Thinking about what comes next.

The second is simply… listening.

No commentary.
No analysis.
Just direct experience.

Same song.

Completely different relationship to it.

Now apply that to your life.

Most of us are living in the first mode—constantly interpreting, labeling, evaluating.

We’re thinking about our experience instead of actually being in it.

But every once in a while, something breaks through.

A moment of awe.
A deep conversation.
A quiet walk where everything feels… present.

In those moments, thinking fades into the background.

And what’s left isn’t emptiness.

It’s clarity.

Connection.

A sense that you’re not separate from what’s happening—you’re part of it.

That’s not the absence of consciousness.

That’s the fullness of it.

Now Try This

So here’s a simple shift to experiment with.

For the next few moments today, don’t try to understand your experience.

Don’t analyze it.

Don’t improve it.

Just notice it.

The sound around you.
The feeling in your body.
The fact that you’re aware of both.

No need to change anything.

Just recognize that awareness is already here—before the next thought, during it, and after it.

Because the goal isn’t to stop thinking.

The goal is to stop mistaking thinking for the whole story.

When you do that, something subtle but powerful happens.

You move from observing life…
to actually being in it.

And from that place, a different kind of understanding begins to emerge.

Not constructed.

Not forced.

But discovered.

When the Faders Come Up


Years ago, I was talking with a sound engineer I knew about the art of mixing music.

He told me a story that has stayed with me ever since, and it is beginning to make sense in today’s geopolitical climate.

He was asked to mix a multitrack recording of a blues band. He instantly regretted saying yes when he began soloing the individual tracks.

The vocal sounded rough, almost painful.
The bass felt sloppy and uncertain.
The drums weren’t particularly tight.

If you heard any one of them alone, you might have thought, This isn’t going to work.

Then he brought all the faders up together.

What came out of the speakers was glorious.

It was emotional.
It was cohesive.
It was alive.

The band didn’t sound broken.
It sounded human.

And somehow, in the blend, all the rough edges found their place.

That was his lesson.

Stop obsessing over every isolated imperfection.
Start listening to the whole.

Where We Are

We live in a world that’s forgotten how to do that.

We are constantly soloing tracks.

We solo countries.
We solo cultures.
We solo identities.
We solo headlines.

And when we do, we hear flaws.

We hear distortion.
We hear imbalance.
We hear things that feel unfinished.

But nothing in the world was ever meant to be heard in isolation.

No single instrument carries the song.
No single nation carries humanity.

The music only emerges when the faders come up together.

The Deeper Truth

There is a deeper truth here.

When you solo a track long enough, you stop hearing music.
You start hearing imperfections.

That’s where we are culturally.

We magnify differences.
We amplify mistakes.
We critique endlessly.

It’s as if we believe that if we just tune every instrument perfectly in isolation, harmony will automatically appear.

But that isn’t how music works.

And it isn’t how civilization works either.

Perfection Is the Enemy

In mixing, perfection is often the enemy of life.

Over-tune the vocal and you lose its soul.
Over-quantize the drums and you lose the groove.
Over-compress the track and you lose the breath.

Sometimes what sounds flawed alone is what makes the whole feel real.

The slight rasp in the voice becomes emotion.
The looseness in the rhythm becomes feel.
The friction becomes energy.

Difference, in context, becomes beauty.

What We Need

The Nous Age, will not be an age of uniformity.

It will be an age of conscious blending.

An age where we understand that humanity is not a solo performance.
It is an ensemble.

No culture needs to disappear for the music to work.
No nation needs to be erased for harmony to exist.
No identity needs to be tuned into sameness.

What we need is balance.

We need listening.

We need perspective.

We need to hear the whole before we judge the parts.

It’s In the Mix

Think about it.

A single neuron doesn’t think.
A single note doesn’t move us.
A single voice doesn’t create a civilization.

But networks do.
Ensembles do.
Interconnection does.

The miracle is not in the track.

It’s in the mix.

Shift the Focus

Maybe the work of this century is not to fix every isolated imperfection.

Maybe it is to raise the faders together.

To widen the frame.
To shift from critique to context.
To hear humanity not as fragments, but as an emerging composition.

Because when you listen to the whole, something changes.

You begin to hear coherence where before you heard chaos.
You begin to feel belonging where before you felt division.
You begin to sense that the music was always there.

We just weren’t listening properly.

Is Anything “Wrong”

The Nous Age begins the moment we stop asking,
“What’s wrong with this track?”

And start asking,

“What happens when we let the ensemble play?”

And then — bravely —
we bring the faders up.

The Essence of a Cup


empty-cup

I’VE COME TO UNDERSTAND that the essence of a cup is not the cup itself, it is the space within the cup. It’s the space that defines it’s purpose…to hold something without form.

Likewise, I believe the essence of the Universe’s smallest particles is not it’s electrons, protons, neutrons, etc. Their essence, indeed their purpose has to do with the space within them.

It’s About Space
If we consider the atom is 99.99% empty space perhaps we would see that our research at CERN is looking in the wrong place to find the so-called God Particle known to scientists as the Higgs boson. And that perhaps the God Particle isn’t even a particle at all!

Ask the Right Question
As a thinking spiritualist I find it hard to watch as science continues to overlook the most obvious question…what’s with all the space? Case in point this recent article: “A question of spin for the new boson” by James Gillies.

Where is Beauty?
To quote from Alan Watts’ book Become What You Are: “A symphony is not explained by a mathematical analysis of it’s notes; the mystery of a woman’s beauty is not revealed by a postmortem dissection; and no one ever understood the wonder of a bird on the wing by stuffing it and putting it in a case.” (p.61)

The purpose of the Universe and everything in it cannot be discovered by analyzing the cup alone. The key to understanding is to ask the right questions and look in the right place for the answer.

As Above So Below


Mark Miller, a doctoral student in Brandeis University, is researching how particular types of neurones in the brain are connected to one another. By staining thin slices of a mouse’s brain, he can identify the connections visually. The image above shows the three neurone cells on the left (two red and one yellow) and their connections.

A international group of astrophysicist used a computer simulation last year to recreate how the Universe grew and evolved. The simulation image above (right) is a snapshot of the present Universe that features a large cluster of galaxies (bright yellow) surrounded by thousands of stars, galaxies and dark matter (web). (The New York Times)

One is only micrometers wide. The other is billions of light-years across. One shows neurones in a mouse brain. The other is a simulated image of the Universe. Together the suggest the surprisingly similar patterns found in vastly different natural phenomena. -DAVID CONSTANTINE

(Source: Mark Miller, Brandeis University; Virgo Consortium for Cosmological Supercomputer Simulations http://www.visualcomplexity.com)

How Music Effects Us


You know how your favourite song makes you feel good? It’s based on science, a science of vibration and sound.

The Universe and everything in it is held together by a symphony of sound [1]. When we harmonize WITH it we feel great…when we’re “out of tune” with it we don’t. And if you’re out of tune for too long, you can make yourself ill.

We all know that matter is made of tiny atoms, electrons spinning around nucleuses at very specific “frequencies”. Have you ever wondered how sound outside the body effects us on the inside?

Watch this video:

The Living Matrix Movie


I believe we have the ability to cure ourselves of disease. The Living Matrix documentary brings together some of the most brilliant minds on the subject like Bruce Lipton, Rupert Sheldrake, Lynne McTaggart, Marilyn Schlitz and others.

The version of the movie below is a bit distorted, it was improperly uploaded, but you can (like I did) purchase a copy on DVD here: The Living Matrix Movie

The Living Matrix – Film on the New Science of Healing (2010) from buzzingfly on Vimeo.

The Scientific Method is Flawed


I BELIEVE that the scientific method is flawed. The only thing that I know for sure is that I am conscious. Consciousness is what we have first, everything after that is questionable. Bringing that one known truth into a scientific world view is where the problems begin.

This is an excerpt from the DVD Thinking Allowed. You can purchase the full DVD here.

Black Whole Movie


Nassim Haramein is a brilliant researcher, thinker and dreamer. Much of my inspiration to dig deeper into the past to find a connection to today’s religious traditions is due to his work.

About a year ago he released a film called Black Whole. To boil it down to one phrase this film uncovers scientific proof that we are one. The global acceptance of this idea is the core premise of what I’m calling “The Nous Age”.

Watch the short trailer here

The entire film is now available to watch online thanks for Vimeo (below for your convenience. If you have never heard Nassim’s astounding research sit back and be prepared to be amazed!

I AM: The Shift is About to Hit the Fan


I AM continually amazed (but not surprised) at the growing number of people who are “waking up” to the need for a new paradigm and who are willing to take the leap to tell as many people as they know.

Coincidence is God’s way of staying anonymous” -Tom Shadyac

The documentary film I AM by Tom Shadyac, who is perhaps better known for his hollywood blockbusters (Bruce Almighty, Patch Adams, Ace Venture: Pet Detective) is another fantastic example of a man at the peak stepping out to tell his audience “what he knows”.

If Tom’s track record with movies is an indicator I AM is poised to be a truly earth changing, paradigm shifting catalyst…moving us even closer to The Nous Age.

WATCH the trailer below, then order it here: ORDER I AM

Consciousness Matters


THE CORE BELIEF behind The Nous Age principle is that consciousness is the primary element of the Universe.

This short film was produced for the IONS conference this summer in San Francisco which I attended.

It features: Edgar Mitchell, Deepak Chopra, Marilyn Schlitz, Dean Radin and Cassandra Vieten in an exploration of the Mysteries of Inner Space.