"What's the point of existence if everything is going into the future and what happened now will soon be forgotten?"
Answered by: William Samuel Lee Jr
December 17, 2024, 5:09:19 PM
Your perspective is slightly distorted. Your question is based on the perspective of the outer ego. There is nothing inherently wrong with holding this outlook, but it raises questions such as this one. Time and space, as you perceive them, do not exist. While your astrophysicists, like Neil deGrasse Tyson, and others may claim to know a lot about “this and that” (lol), their perspectives on reality are just as distorted as those they criticize.
When you eliminate a belief in space and time, you gain the potential to solve many of life’s problems—most of which revolve around a sense of lack created by a new sense of urgency rather than abundance. This urgency is what Einstein called a dimension of time. However, this dimension of time, or urgency, is neither objective nor capable of being uniformly superimposed upon true objective reality. Your modern concept of clock time has been programmed into the ego and psyche of humanity to create activity or action within a certain range.
Where am I going with all this gobbledygook, you might ask? Well, I’m “weaving” the conversation, as President Donald Trump often claims to do. (LOL.) So just relax, okay bro or bro’ette? Read on…
It’s harder to see a point if the point is always moving—catch my drift? A “now moment” exists, but as soon as you acknowledge it, it slides into the past, while the future remains abstractly visible yet always out of reach. This may sound objectively complicated and confusing, and it is. The elimination of a belief in time and adopting psychological time concepts, is far more stable and concrete—if you’ll excuse the pun.
This is why so many people seem to chase meaning or purpose. If their awareness aperture within the ego were allowed to soften and expand, they would see their purpose through the natural progression of their own lives, from beginning to end in human terms.
The point of your existence lies in existence itself. Exploring your purpose within existence is essentially writing a never-ending story about yourself as an individual personality. Change is constant. Everything must change; if it doesn’t, it dies. However, nothing truly dies in the way human concepts of death suggest.
Change is something over which you do not have free will. The fact that all things must change is a fundamental truth throughout all of creation on every vibrational level. When identity perceives action or a part of action, it demonstrates consciousness. The thing is, the observer changes the observed and vice versa. Identity and purpose are always in a state of flux, and you must define them for yourself. But remember: these are just terms and definitions—concepts to help you understand the nature of action which always changes.