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📜 Written Lesson 1: The Illusion of Arrival

Why This Matters:

Tiger opens this course by challenging the common (and seductive) belief that “awakening” is some kind of finish line. He invites us to be honest about what we *think* awakening means — and what it actually changes (and doesn’t) in our human life.

"Awakening is seeing beyond the person we imagine ourselves to be... and beyond the illusion of separation."

This moment of seeing clearly — even if brief — often brings a rush of clarity, a profound sense of love, even the feeling of being lifted into heaven. But then... life continues. And what now? That’s the heart of this lesson. The ego might say, “You’ve made it.” But real integration begins when we let go of the fantasy of arrival — and show up freshly, with humility.

Three Examples

Example: A coach who thinks they’ve figured it out

After a powerful awakening, a space-holder finds themselves guiding others with deep insight. But something sneaky creeps in — a subtle superiority. A belief that they’ve *graduated* from human messiness.

“I’ve seen it all. It’s all love. There’s nothing else to learn.”

But in truth, life starts throwing curveballs again — emotional triggers, unexpected grief, even boredom. What they thought was the end... was really just an invitation to go deeper. Beyond identity. Beyond performance. Into raw honesty.

Example: A woman in a relationship loses touch with herself

She had a moment of unity — a powerful experience of sacred oneness. But now she’s back in her daily life, with a partner who doesn’t understand. She starts wondering: *Was that real? Did I imagine it?*

“If I was really awake, I wouldn’t feel this alone.”

The ego wants certainty. It wants the spiritual high to stay. But the real work now is to show up in the complexity — to love, communicate, and stay present with what’s actually happening, even when it’s not mystical.

Example: Sitting in silence, doubting everything

Someone who once felt one with the universe now sits on their meditation cushion and feels… nothing. They remember the clouds of love, the unity, the awe — but now it’s just stillness. Doubt creeps in.

“Maybe I lost it. Maybe I did something wrong.”

But as Tiger reminds us: awakening is not a place to get back to — it’s a lens that can open again and again. The human mind wants to define it. But the heart knows… it’s not a definition. It’s a deepening.

Reflection Questions

  • Have I assumed that awakening means I’m “done” or that life should feel easy now?
  • Where do I still secretly chase a spiritual high, instead of meeting what’s here?
  • Can I stay open to not-knowing — and trust that love can meet me even in confusion?
Comments
AK
amy Kwanten

Wow these questions are awesome I gotta go get a nice journal for this. 

Wow life is looking after me real good ❤️when I think I can’t take it , really magical shit is going on in thee backgrounds.