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- This topic has 200 replies, 185 voices, and was last updated 1 day, 19 hours ago by Liz.
- May 4, 2020 at 10:01 am EDT #31227
Tony Kosinec- KabU InstructorModeratorDo you ever feel like reality is the product of your own perception?
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- January 3, 2022 at 6:40 pm EST #221370christiany froklichParticipant
Before Kabbalah I didn’t have this perception, but now I understand that when I change my perception I change my reality too.
- December 19, 2021 at 5:56 am EST #220158hamilton de sousaParticipant
yes. Our reality is what we perceive. Depending of the level of our consciousness. This way  the world seems to be different for each one of us. We can call this world haven our hell.
We can perceive a problem as an opportunity to grow and develop our just become a victim and complain that the world is not fair.
- December 7, 2021 at 8:47 pm EST #219197Maria MemoliParticipant
Before knowing Kabbalah, I was not aware about it.
- December 6, 2021 at 1:57 pm EST #219099Gelaye GudisaParticipant
Generally speaking, what you perceive is your reality, therefore reality is totally subjective. Human beings has been given five senses to understand the environment in which they are living(the corporal world), even those sense are not fully developed. Human beings to better understand the true reality, it important to develop new sensing device(vehicle) this started with by changing egoistic desire to altruistic desire.
- November 16, 2021 at 11:35 pm EST #188476RivkaParticipant
I do feel like reality is the product of my own perception. But as the blows from Nature have intensified in my life and my reality at times has felt unbearable, I was drawn to quantum physics for an answer as a scientist. It brought me close, but not to an answer of what reality really is. Now I have found the place where I want to learn what reality is.
- November 15, 2021 at 4:21 pm EST #188382V CParticipant
Yes, but usually only in retrospect. After 35+ years in my field, I’ve been unable to find a work for the last 5 years since turning 65. I’ve gone through extended periods of bitterness and resentment over what I perceived as constant dispossession and discrimination. What releases me from these dark thoughts and despair is the realization that I wouldn’t have been able to heal myself or care for people who are very dear to me if I’d been trapped in the 24/7 schedule my career had demanded.
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