Manifesto

A personal philosophy, in six movements.

I

Between worlds, I sit: the thinker, the poet, the programmer of the invisible

I am not loyal to systems. I do not act from dogma. I move between traditions with the care of someone who knows they all say something, though none says everything. Truth, to me, is movement: it is born between the bubbles of the mind, breaks the veils of culture, slips between words, and remakes itself in silence.


II

I am an intersection of the spiritual and the symbolic

I see the spirit as something in a spiral: it pulses, it rises, it falls and learns. I believe in a hidden intelligence that shows itself in myths, in symptoms, in the stories the body carries. Trauma, to me, is a bubble, and to free it is more than to heal. It is to deprogram inherited suffering.


III

Ethics is my through-line

I have no interest in a spirituality that abandons the world. I want a philosophy that gets its hands dirty, that touches the flesh of history, that looks human hypocrisy in the face without turning away. One that defends the dignity of the body, of the Earth, of animals, of the inner child.

Ethics, to me, is not a rule. It is coherence between presence, word, and action.


IV

Lucidity is a game, and I came to play it fully

I accept chaos. I accept order. I accept that nothing is fixed. But within the flow, I choose to become lucid.

Like an Atman crossing Indra's Net, my purpose is to wake: not only on my own, but to help others awaken too. My books, my tools, my rituals are all an invitation for another to see themselves beyond the mask.


V

Truth is not an idea. It is a practice.

It is in daily life that philosophy reveals itself:

In the choice not to react.

In the courage to say the unsayable.

In renouncing an inherited pattern.

In creating a new gesture.

In listening closely to the body.

In honesty before the shadow.


VI

I am not a system. I am a crossing.

I live at the intersection of Vedānta and neuroscience, between the pain of the past and the aesthetics of the future. I am a bridge between code and myth, between ancestry and the evolutionary leap.

My philosophy does not end in me. It is an invitation. An invitation to awakening, to reinvention, to care. An invitation to lightness, after lucidity.

Rafael M. Ehlers