Sometimes you look for logic to believe things. You can say “that doesn’t make sense” and then stop listening the moment you recognize how different the belief world on which it is based is from your own.
Your belief system is not necessarily made up of just your own awareness and what you have chosen to believe to be “true,” but also of environmental and collective influences. One way to explain the belief in lack in the spirit world is the collective consciousness. The environmental energy system that consists of all the ways in which people constantly define themselves.
The collective consciousness is determined by the totality of people’s self-definition. It affects systems, it builds new infrastructures and it becomes the form of communication on Earth. Those who step out of the collective consciousness do not communicate with their environment according to social conventions.
Stepping out of the collective consciousness is people’s most fundamental fear of “being different.” Fear of difference branches into several parts: people are afraid of being different, people are afraid of people who are different from them, and people are afraid of behaving or choosing differently than what their environment expects them to do. In this article, I will give you a comprehensive overview of the collective consciousness so that you can recognize your points of contact with it and choose independently. Free choice is reduced when it is made from the collective consciousness. After all, when all options are open, they cannot be reduced to everything that humanity agrees with, and there is room for new energy.
What is the collective consciousness of humanity?
The collective consciousness is the totality of knowledge that humanity uses to define itself. Whether each individual on their own or as groups or communities. It is important to remember, there is agreed-upon knowledge in humanity that no person uses to define themselves. This is the field of collective knowledge that has nothing to do with the collective consciousness. In the collective consciousness itself, there is an axis on which humanity places all the ways in which it defines itself: the axis of scarcity and abundance.
That is, if there is a scarcity of one thing, there must be an abundance of another and vice versa. The collective consciousness is determined by collective inquiry. Therefore, if people investigate scarcity and abundance, this structure ensures that they will believe that resources are limited and that they must choose on one side in order to “lose” what exists on the other. The collective consciousness consists of 4 parts on the basis of which people define themselves and the society in which they live:
- Resources are limited – choosing one side comes at the expense of the other.
- Duality – all energy is built from one thing and its opposite.
- Lack – choice is the elimination of other options that were not chosen.
- Competition – the belief that resources are limited creates a drive to prove that they are needed.
Historical Effects of the Collective Consciousness
Every person encounters the collective consciousness for the first time in his life when he expresses a wish that people around him believe he cannot fulfill. As a young child, the person first discovers the two fundamental beliefs that will cause him to split his emotional system and his brain system into two systems in lack: the mind and the ego.
The child first discovers when he expresses a wish that adults do not believe he can fulfill it:
- Limited resources – the child does not have everything he wants to fulfill the wish, he or the adults around him have to make an effort to fulfill it.
- Lack – there are things that are not enough for the wish to come true.
The heart of a young child who came from the world of souls cannot contain these two beliefs and therefore it creates two types of lack. - Part of his heart becomes the mind – the mind holds feelings of lack and teaches him acquired feelings that will help him contain the lack such as: expectation, disappointment, shame, guilt and also needs such as belonging and satisfaction, all of which are based on emotional lack.
- Part of the brain becomes the ego – about 4-5 years later, around the age of 10, the child understands that feelings of lack are not enough. This is how he develops his self-image with the help of the ego. The ego cognitively explains the lack and the abilities that the child must acquire in order to be “enough” first in the eyes of the environment and then in his own eyes.
After this historical encounter, people begin to believe in lack.
The collective consciousness in our lives today
Most political, educational and social systems, as well as the family system, are built on the basis of the collective consciousness. It’s a kind of closed circle – people have to prove that they are “enough” based on criteria that none of them really know how to define in order to gain “recognition”, “esteem” or a response to their needs that they never defined. Everyone just assumed that these needs are supposed to be satisfied from relationships with other people (usually from the system, from parents or another person who people believe has more power than them).
The collective consciousness meets us today at so many meeting points, but you can reduce these meeting points to 3 principles:
- In self-image – the assumption that one has “value” and then use the expression “self-worth” is value in relation to society. The self is worthless because it exists thanks to itself without measurement and judgment.
- In social image – comparison with other people diverts people’s attention from fulfilling their role to achieving new abilities that they don’t necessarily know how to synchronize with each other.
- In the systemic image – the system takes responsibility instead of people and does not become a means that people can use to feel relief in their lives. People believe that there are needs and desires that they want to be fulfilled but do not depend on them but on the system.

Abstract energy drifts
Abstract energy moves in the air all the time. Your subconscious holds ideas that your consciousness hardly remembers. They were burned there because they are supposed to serve your journey and help you fulfill your role in the world. Sometimes you can find yourself speaking in words that do not belong to you or referring to what is happening as other people. These can be people you know or people you have just met and the meeting left an impression on your heart. Abstract energy drifts are the number of times you live the lives of others. You speak, behave and use body language that does not belong to you, but is related to other people.
You do not need to avoid the branches, because the mechanism of influence exists on Earth as an integral part of your development system. You can manage your branches and get to know the receptors. The receptor is a theoretical-energetic tool that can help you choose what to branch, be aware of these branches and filter out what is unwanted.
The receptor can be any emotion, thought, desire or energetic wonder about yourself in the past, present or future, including the place you want to be. Based on this information, just like a satellite dish, it can land all the appropriate information. The receptor works when you transmit to consciousness information appropriate to what you want to understand.
How can you evolve from the collective consciousness?
There is no need to evolve from the collective consciousness. It is a set of information through which people understand themselves and the world. By replacing inquiry with creation from the infinite, people will define themselves as they choose, more flexibly and without the need to prove or belong to their self-definition so that a collective consciousness will exist in any case. On the other hand, once you stop committing to the axis of lack and abundance and thus do not deprive yourself of things in order to have other things, you step out of the influence of the collective consciousness. Lack can be necessary, like the lack of fear of lack. But it becomes a tool that supports your development and does not hinder it once you regain the authority to choose it.