You Don't Climb a Mountain by Accident

The ideas you are reading about didn’t come from a book. They weren’t just a random flash of inspiration or a wild theory dreamed up overnight.

They are built on a foundation of 28 years of dedicated meditation practice.

This is the most important point. This isn’t about abstract philosophy; it’s about direct, repeatable experience.

For nearly three decades, the work was about learning to quiet the mind. The goal was to turn down the volume on the noisy, anxious “washing machine” of everyday thought and learn to listen to the signal underneath.

This long-term training did two crucial things:

you don t climb mountain accident
  1. It cleared the static, making it possible to hear the faint whispers from the Global Consciousness Network—the gut feelings, the intuitive hits, the moments of knowing.

  2. It built the mental and energetic “muscle” needed to handle a flood of new information without breaking. An experience like this can feel like drinking from a firehose. The years of practice built a container strong enough to hold it.

This journey wasn’t an accident. It was a training program. The foundation had to be built before the house could be.