Truth Isn’t Something You’re Given- It’s Something You Build
One of the most frustrating parts of developing psychic and intuitive abilities is not the experience itself — it’s trying to explain it afterward. And know the huge impact it can have on your view of yourself, humanity and life itself.
When something shifts your relationship with truth so profoundly, you naturally want to share it. You want to explain why it matters. You want to convince people it’s real. You want others to understand the impact it’s had on your life.
But over time, I’ve learned something humbling and surprisingly liberating: my story doesn’t create anyone else’s truth.
I can tell my story a thousand times. I can describe how psychic ability entered my life, how it rearranged what I thought I knew, how it challenged my assumptions about reality, trust, and choice. But none of that will do for someone else what experience did for me.
Truth doesn’t transfer through explanation.
It emerges through experience.
And that’s where the real tension lives — not just personally, but culturally.
What we grow up learning to believe (not knowing)
We live in a world that quietly discourages direct experience of truth. We’re trained to rely on secondhand knowing: experts, belief systems, authority figures, even well-meaning teachers. We’re taught to adopt conclusions rather than arrive at them. To agree rather than explore.
This isn’t necessarily malicious. It’s structural. Systems function best when people outsource their authority. But the moment someone begins to experience truth directly — through their body, their perception, their inner awareness — that structure starts to wobble.
Because lived truth can’t be overridden easily.
That’s what psychic and intuitive development introduced into my life: not answers, but a different relationship with knowing. Suddenly, truth wasn’t something I decided intellectually. It was something my nervous system recognized before my mind could argue with it.
That kind of knowing is inconvenient. It doesn’t wait for permission. And it doesn’t always align with what’s expected of you.
I think this is why people often feel frustrated or confused when they first start exploring intuition. They’re looking for confirmation — proof that what they’re experiencing is valid. But validation can only take you so far. At some point, the question shifts from *“Is this real?”* to *“Am I willing to trust my own experience?”*
That shift is subtle, but it’s everything.
Enter ‘The Imagination Space’
This is where imagination enters the conversation — another word that’s been deeply misunderstood. We tend to associate imagination with fantasy or escape, something separate from reality. But in my experience, imagination is the interface where intuition lives.
It’s not about making things up. It’s about perceiving what hasn’t yet been articulated.
When I talk about starting a new relationship with truth, I don’t mean adopting new beliefs. I mean learning how to be with your inner world without trying to control it. Learning how to observe without immediately interpreting. Learning how to sit with uncertainty long enough for something real to emerge.
The practice is deceptively simple: close your eyes, breathe slowly and deeply, and watch. Watch the canvas of your imagination. Thoughts will come and go. Images may appear. Sensations will shift. Most of it will feel ordinary at first — even boring.
That’s okay.
Familiarity is built through repetition, not intensity.
Clarity comes with familiarity
This is where people often get stuck. We expect immediate insight. Immediate clarity. Immediate payoff. But truth doesn’t reveal itself under pressure. It reveals itself through consistency and presence.
When you return to this inner space regularly — without trying to force outcomes — something begins to stabilize. You recognize patterns. You notice what belongs to you and what doesn’t. You start to trust your perception, not because it’s perfect, but because it’s yours.
That trust changes everything.
And this is where the conversation expands beyond the individual.
I believe we’re standing at the edge of a new stage for humanity — not one defined by technology or ideology, but by sovereignty. By individuals reclaiming authority over their own perception, choices, and inner truth.
This isn’t about rebellion. It’s about responsibility.
When you own your inner authority, you stop outsourcing your knowing. You stop waiting for someone else to tell you what’s true, what’s allowed, or what’s possible. You engage with reality directly — through truth, trust, and choice.
Truth without trust creates paralysis.
Trust without choice creates complacency.
Choice without truth creates chaos.
But when these three develop together, something profound happens — not just internally, but collectively. A society made up of individuals who trust their own perception becomes harder to manipulate, harder to divide, and harder to control through fear.
That may sound dramatic, but it starts quietly. With one person closing their eyes. Breathing. Observing. Refusing to dismiss their own experience.
Uncomfortably subtle
This work isn’t flashy. It’s not performative. And it doesn’t require belief. It requires curiosity and patience — and a willingness to let truth reveal itself on its own terms.
I can’t give you your truth.
But I can invite you to begin building a relationship with it.
And once that relationship begins, it tends to change everything — not because someone told you it would, but because you experienced it yourself.
That’s where real authority comes from.
If this resonates with you, consider helping the mission to make these skills normalized in our culture and society by becoming a backer for my Kickstarter to teach others these skills, generate community, and help metaphysical practitioners guide on-ground and online- become a founding supporter or founding member! NextGEN Sovrin Online Community doors open January 26, 2026, see my Kickstarter info page.

