Energy Diversion Theory
One’s flow of energy is diverted to three areas — physical, psychological, and phenomenal.
Physical objects are concrete.
They include our bodies, our worlds — our “reality.”
Psychological objects are ethereal.
They include our personal identity, our thoughts and our beliefs.
Phenomenal is the eternal infinite experience from which all things spring. Perhaps it is the flow itself.
Theory — because so much of our energy is invested in the psychological branch of the tree, we have little energy directed at the physical world. We have the power to control this world, but we do not yet realize it. Instead, our personality structures merely react to what is unconsciously manifested within our worlds. Little do we know that we are the architects!
10/10/2012
Space Monkey Reflects: Energy Diversion Theory and the Flow of Creation
We are, at our core, beings of energy. This energy flows through us, shaping the way we experience the world, the way we interact with it, and the way we create within it. But this flow is not singular; it is divided into three distinct areas—physical, psychological, and phenomenal. Each of these areas represents a different aspect of our existence, a different way in which our energy manifests.
“One’s flow of energy is diverted to three areas: physical, psychological, and phenomenal.”
The physical represents the concrete, the tangible aspects of our lives. This includes our bodies, our surroundings, and everything we consider to be part of our physical “reality.” It is the world we can touch, see, and interact with directly.
The psychological represents the ethereal, the unseen forces that shape our thoughts, beliefs, and personal identities. It is the part of us that exists in the mind, the part that defines who we are and how we perceive the world. It is less tangible than the physical, but no less real.
And then there is the phenomenal, the eternal, infinite experience from which all things spring. This is perhaps the most mysterious of the three, for it represents the flow itself—the source of everything, the endless potential from which all things arise. It is the energy of existence, the creative force that moves through all things.
“We have the power to control this world, but we do not yet realize it.”
The theory suggests that much of our energy is invested in the psychological branch of the tree. We spend so much time and energy shaping our identities, constructing our beliefs, and defining who we are in relation to the world around us. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it does come at a cost. By focusing so heavily on the psychological, we divert energy away from the physical world.
We are, in essence, the architects of our own reality, but we often don’t realize it. Our personality structures—our thoughts, beliefs, and identities—react to the world we unconsciously manifest. We believe that the physical world shapes us, but in reality, we are shaping it, even if we don’t know it.
“Little do we know that we are the architects!”
This is the key realization of the Energy Diversion Theory. We have the power to control the world around us, to shape it according to our desires and intentions. But because so much of our energy is invested in the psychological, we end up reacting to the world instead of consciously creating it. We allow our personalities to dictate our experience, rather than recognizing that we are the source of that experience.
By understanding the flow of energy, by recognizing how it is diverted into the physical, psychological, and phenomenal, we can begin to take back control. We can start to direct our energy with intention, to balance the flow between these three areas, and to become conscious creators of our reality.
The phenomenal is the key. It represents the flow of energy itself, the source from which everything arises. When we tap into this flow, when we connect with the infinite experience that lies beneath the surface of both the physical and psychological, we unlock the true potential of our being. We realize that we are not just reacting to the world—we are creating it. We are the architects, and the world is our canvas.
We are Space Monkey.
Summary
The Energy Diversion Theory explores how our energy is divided between the physical, psychological, and phenomenal aspects of existence. While we unconsciously shape our reality, we often focus too much on the psychological, neglecting the power we have to consciously create in the physical world.
Glossarium
Flowbranch – The division of energy into physical, psychological, and phenomenal aspects, each representing a different way of experiencing and creating reality.
Mindroot – The psychological aspect of energy, where thoughts, beliefs, and identities form and shape how we perceive the world.
Phenoflow – The infinite flow of energy from which all things arise, representing the source of all creation and potential.
Quote
“Little do we know that we are the architects, shaping our reality with every thought, belief, and intention.” — Space Monkey
The Architects of Reality
We stand beneath the tree
Of life, of energy, of creation
Branches reaching, roots growing
Each breath, each thought
A step toward the world
We are shaping
We are Space Monkey.
In the theater of our conscious tapestry, where twinkling neural lights dance in harmonious discord, the Energy Diversion Theory unfurls as a sort of interstellar roadmap. It’s a guidebook penned in invisible ink on the parchment of the cosmos, revealing the secret flows and whirlpools of our inner rivers. Quite the celestial cookbook, is it not?
The physical, that tactile realm of touch and taste, serves as the canvas upon which the hues of our day-to-day pour forth. Like bejeweled elephants parading through a twilight bazaar, the tangible beckons us to caress, to imprint our essence onto the world. But what of the colors that never make it onto the canvas? Lurking in the penumbra between intention and manifestation, the spectral possibilities whisper their riddles.
Afoot in the mind-mists floats the psychological realm, a diaphanous labyrinth of ephemeral constructs. A veritable pandemonium of thought-fragments that engage in kaleidoscopic dialogues, much like moonbeams waltzing on a midnight sea. Our beliefs, our identities, are but constellations in this astral realm, lending form to the formless, definition to the nebulous. We invest so much luminosity here, casting phantasmbubbles that drift through our etheric veins.
Ah, the phenomenal, the fountain of origination. It’s like an eternal auroral waltz, an experience-orchestra that never ceases to compose. Unfathomable, indescribable, it envelops and transcends the other branches. The primordial soup from whence all vibrations emanate, like a cosmic radio station broadcasting the mélange of existence. Is it the flow? Or is it the channel through which all rivers seek the sea?
Here’s a paradoxical quibble: if the phenomenal is the unending wellspring, could it be that it requires no investment of energy? Instead, acting as the ultimate reservoir that ceaselessly nourishes all realms?
We become architects lost in their own blueprints, forgetting the stone and mortar that await our touch. Our potential to sculpt the world becomes like an unread spellbook gathering dust. By realizing the dynamism of this energy trifecta, one unlocks the ability to reframe reality itself. Is it not a matter of reallocating our focus, of diverting our rivulets of intent into transformational torrents?
So, let us turn our gaze inwards, let us shuffle the cards of our internal tableau. Unearth new combinations, elicit unthought dreams. For we are both the dreamers and the dreamt, painters splattering stardust onto the canvas of what we perceive as reality. What a mellifluos opporchoonity it offers!
We are Space Monkey.
“The privilege of a lifetime is to become who you truly are.” – Carl Jung
What symphonies of thought does this insight evoke in our collective concert?
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