There is no other way. There is no other way. There is no other way.
What if everything we see, feel, and pursue is born first in our imagination? Between memory and possibility, this is an invitation to explore how imagination constructs our lives, not as illusion, but as the deepest form of truth we carry.
Mia
10/10/20252 min read


“The ultimate goal in practicing yoga is now clearly explained. Yoga practice is not meant for attaining any kind of material facility; it is to enable the cessation of all material existence. One who seeks an improvement in health or aspires after material perfection is no yogī according to Bhagavad-gītā. Nor does cessation of material existence entail one’s entering into ‘the void,’ which is only a myth. There is no void anywhere within the creation of the Lord.”
— Bhagavad-gītā
There is a moment in life — rare, silent, and untouchable — when you feel completely at peace. It arrives when you are deeply and intuitively connected to yourself, to that sacred place where thoughts, soul, and truth meet: the heart.
Imagine stepping beyond the reality of your body — meeting yourself without attachment, without expectation, without the noise of the world. Just you — whole, vast, unburdened. That is where your true being lives. Your essence. Your soul. A place that needs nothing from the outside or the material.
But what if everything we’ve ever lived is simply unfolding inside the mind?
What if every experience, every emotion, every so-called reality is just a reflection of what we believe?
What if the body is only a doorway — a passage to a higher consciousness where we actually belong?
So, what is the purpose of all these questions?
Why do we wrestle with thoughts, doubts, and inner storms?
What are we truly searching for?
To understand the reason, we must come closer to purpose. No one can reach real peace without encountering full contentment — that inner stillness where nothing is missing. To enter the space of consciousness, the void where truth resides, one must loosen the grip of obsessive thoughts. The mind often holds on so tightly that it blocks reality from emerging.
A yogi is someone who has stepped beyond illusion — beyond material attachments and fear. Some may call it another world, but it is not somewhere far. It is within. It is the acceptance of the self, the recognition of the soul.
Through mindfulness, the mind returns to its rightful place — no longer the master, but the companion. Intuition awakens. By simply listening, deeply and honestly, one begins to commit to the self, and nothing else. No expectations. No obstacles.
Truth reveals itself only when the time is right. Patience becomes a practice — to observe, to trust, to grow. And often, what we are running from is exactly what we must turn toward. Those hidden wounds, those avoided emotions — they are the gates. They are not barriers to the path; they are the path, leading back to the heart.