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Don’t React

Don’t React: Choosing Peace Over Programming

In this reflective and deeply practical episode of TheAlexShow.TV, Alex explores one of the most misunderstood yet transformative principles of inner freedom: don’t react. At first glance, this idea can sound passive, weak, or even irresponsible. But as Alex explains, not reacting has nothing to do with avoidance, suppression, or indifference. It is about reclaiming sovereignty over your inner state.

Reaction, as described in this conversation, is not strength. It is conditioning. It is the automatic response of the mind and body when they feel threatened, judged, or challenged. Learning not to react is not about giving up; it is about choosing peace consciously.

Why Reaction Feels So Automatic

From a very young age, most people are conditioned to believe that reaction is necessary. Someone raises their voice, you raise yours. Someone insults you, you defend yourself. Someone hurts you, you hurt them back. This pattern is so normalized that questioning it can feel unnatural.

Alex describes this world as a constant stream of stimuli designed to provoke reactions. News, social media, politics, family dynamics, and even relationships often operate by pulling emotional triggers. The moment you react, you disconnect from your true self and fall back into automatic behavior.

Reaction, in this sense, is not conscious choice. It is programming.

Reaction Comes From the Ego

Throughout the episode, Alex makes a clear distinction between reaction and intention. Reaction originates in the egoic mind, whose primary functions are survival, defense, and validation. When the ego feels attacked, it reacts without asking permission.

Fear, rage, envy, pride, and the need to be right all live in this reactive space. These emotions are not evil, but they are not your essence. They arise when identity is threatened.

Alex emphasizes that your reactions belong to you. No one else controls them. And because they are yours, you are not obligated to follow them.

Not Reacting Is Not Passivity

A common misunderstanding is that not reacting means allowing injustice, abuse, or mistreatment. Alex is very clear: not reacting does not mean staying in harmful situations.

You can leave a toxic job.
You can end a harmful relationship.
You can walk away from abusive environments.

What changes is how you do it.

Instead of acting from rage or vengeance, you act from clarity. Instead of exploding emotionally, you make deliberate decisions that restore harmony.

Choosing Peace Is an Act of Strength

Alex shares personal stories and observations that illustrate this point. People who choose peace are often misunderstood as weak, but the opposite is true. Remaining calm in a reactive world requires immense inner stability.

Peace is not something you find outside. It is your natural state when you stop feeding the noise.

As highlighted in the support material referenced in the episode, peace does not depend on external circumstances. Reaction hides peace. Silence reveals it.

Reaction Versus Intuition

One of the most important distinctions in this episode is between reaction and intuition. Reaction is loud, urgent, and emotional. Intuition is quiet, subtle, and grounded.

When you react, you are listening to the mind.
When you do not react, you create space to hear the heart.

Alex explains that intuition does not demand immediate action. It waits. It observes. It responds only when necessary.

Violence and Justification

In a particularly honest segment, Alex discusses conversations with people who believe violence is justified because of past trauma or repeated exposure. Rather than condemning them, he acknowledges their experience.

If violence feels like the right reaction for someone at a certain stage, that is their path. But Alex also points out an important pattern: violence always leaves an aftertaste. Even when justified, it creates an energetic hangover.

Peace, by contrast, leaves no residue.

The World Feeds on Reaction

Much of modern society thrives on emotional engagement. Outrage drives clicks. Fear drives compliance. Conflict drives attention.

Alex suggests that one of the most powerful ways to disengage from unhealthy systems is simply not to react. When you stop feeding them energy, they lose influence over you.

Not reacting is not ignoring reality; it is refusing to be consumed by it.

Relationships and Emotional Freedom

In relationships, reaction is often mistaken for passion. Arguments, jealousy, and emotional volatility are normalized as signs of love. Alex challenges this idea.

If a relationship constantly triggers reactions, it may not be aligned. Staying out of fear of loneliness often causes more suffering than being alone.

Choosing peace sometimes means choosing solitude. And that choice is not a failure.

Letting Go of Old Wounds

Alex also addresses long-held resentment, especially toward family members. Reliving past pain repeatedly is a form of reaction. It keeps the wound alive.

Letting go does not mean approving what happened. It means refusing to let it define your present.

Wishing others well — even from a distance — is not weakness. It is liberation.

Work, Money, and Harmony

Another practical aspect of not reacting is how it applies to work and daily life. Many people wake up already reacting to their jobs, their routines, and their responsibilities.

Alex suggests that harmony matters more than status or income. Choosing a path that aligns with peace may require difficult changes, but the reward is inner stability.

Money can be earned in many ways. Peace cannot be bought.

Not Reacting Is a Daily Practice

Alex is clear that not reacting is not easy. It is simple, but not easy. It requires awareness, patience, and consistent self-observation.

You will still feel emotions. You will still notice impulses. The difference is that you no longer obey them automatically.

Each moment of non-reaction strengthens your inner center.

The Natural State of Being

At its core, this episode reminds us that peace is not something to achieve. It is something to remember.

When you stop reacting, you return to your natural state. From that place, decisions are clearer, relationships are healthier, and life becomes lighter.

Final Reflection

Don’t react does not mean don’t care.

It means don’t surrender your inner peace to external chaos.

Not reacting is choosing love over fear, clarity over impulse, and harmony over conflict.

For more conversations on conscious living, inner peace, and self-discovery, visit TheAlexShow.TV and continue the journey with Alex.

You can’t pretend anymore – Waking up hurts

You Can’t Pretend Anymore – Waking Up Hurts

In this deeply honest and transformative episode of TheAlexShow.TV, Alex explores a phase of awakening that is rarely discussed with clarity and compassion: the moment when pretending becomes impossible. The title, You Can’t Pretend Anymore – Waking Up Hurts, may sound harsh at first glance, but the message behind it is neither pessimistic nor discouraging. It is an invitation to understand what is actually happening when reality begins to feel uncomfortable in ways it never did before.

This discomfort is not physical pain, nor is it suffering in the traditional sense. Alex reframes the word “hurts” as transformation. What hurts is not awakening itself, but the friction between who you have been conditioned to be and who you are beginning to remember yourself as.

Why Awakening Feels Uncomfortable

Awakening is often romanticized as a moment of bliss, clarity, and peace. While those elements do emerge, they are rarely the first stages. The initial phase is disorienting. Old structures that once provided certainty begin to collapse, and familiar narratives no longer feel authentic.

According to Alex, this discomfort arises because awakening forces a shift in perception. You start seeing reality differently, and once that shift happens, there is no going back. You may find yourself wishing, even briefly, that you had never started this process at all.

This reaction is natural. It does not mean something has gone wrong. It means something is changing.

You Are Not Broken

A central message of this episode is reassurance. Feeling disconnected, out of place, or unable to engage in old patterns does not mean you are broken. It means you are waking up.

Alex references the work of Carl Jung, particularly the concept of individuation. Jung observed that spiritual transformation rarely occurs through dramatic revelations. Instead, it unfolds quietly, through a gradual shedding of what no longer resonates.

You stop forcing conversations. You stop tolerating environments that drain you. You stop wearing masks that once felt necessary. Not because you decided to, but because your spirit simply cannot tolerate them anymore.

The End of Pretending

One of the most noticeable changes during awakening is the inability to pretend. Pretending to care about things that no longer matter. Pretending to agree just to maintain harmony. Pretending to fit into roles that feel increasingly artificial.

Alex emphasizes that this does not mean becoming isolated, arrogant, or dismissive of others. It means becoming honest with yourself.

The exhaustion many people feel is not caused by awakening itself, but by trying to remain someone they are no longer aligned with.

A Shift in Identity

As this process unfolds, identity begins to loosen. You may no longer define yourself through labels such as political affiliation, belief systems, or even spiritual identities. Alex is careful to avoid labeling this process as “being spiritual,” because labels themselves can become another form of separation.

Everyone is spiritual by nature. Everyone is spirit experiencing reality through a soul and a body. Awakening does not make someone more spiritual than others. It simply reflects a different stage of experience.

This understanding removes hierarchy and judgment from the process.

Relationships During Awakening

One of the most challenging aspects of waking up is navigating relationships. Family gatherings, social events, and long-standing friendships may begin to feel strained—not because others have changed, but because you have.

Alex speaks candidly about this dynamic. Awakening does not mean cutting people off or withdrawing from life. In fact, total isolation is not the answer.

Instead, it requires a new way of relating. Less debate. Less need to be right. More listening. More compassion.

Family, Friends, and Attachment

Alex shares a personal reflection on how family and friends evolve over time. Biological family may become chosen family, and lifelong friends may become family through shared experience.

Deep bonds do not require constant interaction. Like a strong tree, once roots are established, less maintenance is needed. This applies to relationships during awakening as well.

You may interact less, but the connection remains. And when interactions do happen, they are often more authentic.

Letting Go of Being Right

One of the earliest shifts during awakening is the loss of interest in being right. Arguments lose their appeal. Validation from others becomes unnecessary.

Alex explains that many people are deeply programmed to seek validation. They need agreement to feel secure. When you stop participating in that dynamic, it can create friction.

But over time, a quiet respect often emerges. Others sense that they will not get validation or resistance from you, and the interaction softens.

Politics, Religion, and Silence

Family gatherings often revolve around sensitive topics such as politics, religion, and social issues. During awakening, engaging in these discussions can feel increasingly uncomfortable.

Alex suggests that silence is not avoidance. It is discernment.

You are not required to have an opinion on everything. Choosing not to engage is not weakness; it is clarity.

When asked directly, it is perfectly valid to say, “I don’t have an opinion,” or “I’d rather not discuss that.”

Trusting the Inner Process

A recurring theme throughout this episode is trust. Trusting the process. Trusting intuition. Trusting that not having answers is part of the journey.

Awakening does not provide immediate clarity. It removes false certainty first.

Alex emphasizes that this process is individual. There are no timelines. No dates. No collective deadlines. Free will makes prediction impossible.

Each person wakes up in their own way, at their own pace.

The Myth of Collective Ascension

Alex addresses a common narrative in modern spiritual culture: the idea that humanity is collectively ascending on a fixed timeline.

While collective change is possible, it can only occur when individuals choose to behave differently. Awakening cannot be imposed, predicted, or scheduled.

Any belief that places some people above others is rooted in ego, not awareness.

Living in This World While Waking Up

Awakening does not remove you from this world. You are still here to live, work, love, and connect.

The difference is how you participate.

You may still attend gatherings. You may still engage socially. But you do so without pretending. Without forcing. Without betraying yourself.

This balance is subtle and requires patience.

Why It Feels Like Loss

Many people interpret awakening as loss. Loss of interest. Loss of connection. Loss of motivation.

Alex reframes this entirely. What feels like loss is actually release. You are not losing yourself; you are losing what you were never meant to carry.

Old emotions such as hate, rage, envy, pride, and judgment begin to fall away—not because you suppress them, but because they no longer serve a purpose.

Compassion for Others

A crucial reminder in this episode is compassion. Awakening does not make you superior. It makes you more understanding.

Others are not wrong because they are at a different stage. Everyone has a process. No one is ahead or behind.

Judgment dissolves naturally when identity loosens.

Discovering Your True Self

The episode closes with a familiar but powerful invitation: discover who you truly are.

This discovery is personal. No one can do it for you.

Alex suggests dedicating a few minutes a day to asking simple questions: “Who am I?” “Where do I come from?” “What is my purpose?”

The answers will not arrive as explanations. They will arrive as shifts.

Freedom Beyond Pretending

When you stop pretending, freedom emerges. Not the freedom to escape life, but the freedom to live it authentically.

You stop competing. You stop complaining. You stop depending on external validation.

You begin to trust what you feel inside.

Final Reflection

Waking up hurts because it changes you. And change is uncomfortable when you try to remain the same.

You cannot unsee what you have seen. You cannot unknow what you have realized.

This is not a curse. It is growth.

You are not broken.

You are waking up.

For more reflections on awakening, self-discovery, and conscious living, visit TheAlexShow.TV and continue the journey with Alex.

You are not human – You are Creation

You Are Not Human – You Are Creation

In this profound episode of TheAlexShow.TV, Alex invites us to reconsider one of the most deeply ingrained assumptions of our existence: the belief that we are merely human. According to this perspective, being human is not an identity but an experience, a temporary role played by something far greater. The central message is both liberating and unsettling — you are not human, you are creation itself.

This idea is not presented as a metaphor meant to inspire motivation or self-esteem. Instead, it is offered as a literal reorientation of identity. Humanity, as Alex explains, is comparable to a character in a film. The character has a name, a story, struggles, relationships, and a limited arc. But the actor behind the character exists beyond that role. In the same way, what you truly are exists beyond the human experience.

The Actor and the Role

One of the most powerful analogies in this episode is the comparison between an actor and the roles they play. An actor may appear in dozens or even hundreds of films, portraying radically different characters. None of those characters define the actor’s true identity. They are expressions, not the source.

Being human is one such role. It is not insignificant, nor is it meaningless. But it is not the sum total of what you are. When someone says, “I am only human,” they are unknowingly limiting their identity to a single role while ignoring the vast spectrum of experiences that consciousness is capable of expressing.

According to Alex, this is why it becomes so difficult for many people to even consider past lives, let alone experiences beyond humanity. If one cannot acknowledge having been human before, how could one acknowledge having been something else entirely?

Creation Experiencing Itself

The episode builds on a recurring theme throughout the channel: creation experiencing itself through form. You are not a byproduct of the universe; you are the universe exploring itself from a specific point of view. The human experience is dense, immersive, and designed to feel real precisely because it requires focus.

This density comes with a cost: forgetting. Forgetting who you are, where you come from, and what you have experienced before. Alex explains that this forgetting is not accidental. It is part of the structure of this reality. To fully experience being human, consciousness temporarily narrows its awareness.

This narrowing does not destroy what you are. It only obscures it.

Reincarnation and Free Will

Alex briefly touches on reincarnation, clarifying an important distinction. The repetition of human experiences does not mean the experience is wrong or flawed. Watching the same movie more than once does not make the movie bad. The issue arises only when repetition occurs without awareness or free will.

The concern is not reincarnation itself, but the possibility of being influenced into repeating experiences without full understanding. Creation, by its nature, must operate through free will. Any system that interferes with that principle creates imbalance.

However, this episode does not dwell on that subject. Instead, it refocuses on identity — who you are beyond cycles, roles, and stories.

You Are More Than This Reality

According to Alex, one of the reasons this reality feels so consuming is because we collectively elect to focus on it. Attention is energy, and where attention goes, experience solidifies. By choosing to focus almost exclusively on the physical, we reinforce the illusion that this is all there is.

This does not mean the human experience should be rejected or diminished. On the contrary, Alex emphasizes that being human is valuable. It offers perspective, emotion, relationships, and growth. The problem arises only when the experience becomes an identity.

When you define yourself exclusively as human, you unconsciously reject every other aspect of your existence.

The Ego and the Mind

A significant portion of the episode addresses the role of the ego. The mind, Alex explains, operates through the ego. This does not make the ego evil or inherently negative. It simply means the ego has its own agenda: survival, validation, control, and certainty.

The ego cannot comprehend divine consciousness, intuition, or the higher self because those concepts exist beyond comparison and definition. The ego thrives on labels. Creation does not.

Trying to understand your true nature purely through intellectual effort often leads to frustration. The mind wants clear answers, timelines, and proof. Consciousness, however, communicates through intuition, feeling, and resonance.

Why the Truth Feels Cryptic

Alex explains that higher understanding does not arrive in neatly packaged explanations. It does not come as a book, a vision, or an external authority figure. In fact, anyone claiming to deliver absolute truth in a fully digested form should raise concern.

True insight arrives subtly. Through synchronicities. Through emotional resonance. Through questions that arise spontaneously rather than answers that are imposed.

This is why modern culture’s obsession with speed and simplification works against deeper understanding. Shorts, clips, and rapid consumption may entertain, but they rarely transform.

Asking the Right Questions

Rather than seeking answers, Alex encourages asking better questions. Spending even a few minutes a day asking the universe simple questions such as “Who am I?” or “Where do I come from?” opens space for awareness.

The responses will not arrive as direct explanations. They may come as shifts in perception, changes in priorities, or subtle realizations that unfold over time. This process cannot be rushed.

Patience is not a virtue here; it is a requirement.

Personal Experience and Forgetting

Alex shares that as a child, he experienced states of awareness that felt expansive and non-human. Over time, as the ego developed, those experiences faded. This, he explains, is not unique. It is part of growing into the human role.

The development of the ego stabilizes the experience of being human, but it also limits access to broader awareness. The challenge is not eliminating the ego, but understanding its function and not allowing it to dominate identity.

You will always have an ego in this experience. The key is how you relate to it.

Discovering the True Self

The episode culminates in a simple but profound invitation: discover who you truly are. Not intellectually, but experientially. This discovery is deeply personal. No teacher, system, or belief structure can do it for you.

Alex emphasizes that your limits are self-imposed. Fear, envy, rage, pride, judgment, and comparison are not inherent traits. They are byproducts of egoic identification.

As awareness expands, these emotions naturally lose relevance. They no longer serve a purpose and gradually dissolve.

Service and Compassion

One of the most important clarifications in this episode is that recognizing your true nature does not remove you from humanity. It deepens your connection to it.

As identification with ego softens, compassion increases. Service becomes natural rather than obligatory. Helping others is no longer about being right or superior, but about resonance and understanding.

Alex reminds listeners to be patient with others. Everyone has their own process. Awakening cannot be forced, and comparison only reinforces separation.

Enjoy the Human Experience

Finally, Alex stresses the importance of enjoying this life. Repair relationships when possible. Let go of pride. Appreciate loved ones. The human experience is temporary, but it is meaningful.

You are not here to escape humanity, but to experience it without forgetting who you are.

You are not human.

You are creation, exploring itself through a human form.

For more explorations into identity, consciousness, and the deeper nature of reality, visit TheAlexShow.TV and continue the journey with Alex.

Lets talk about Death – Guest Jose Luis Cortez Peñafiel from México

Let’s Talk About Death: Consciousness, the Great Death, and the Illusion of Separation

Death is one of the few subjects that almost everyone avoids, yet it is the only experience guaranteed to every human being. In this profound conversation on TheAlexShow.TV, Alex welcomes back José Luis Cortés Peñafiel from Mexico for a deep, uncompromising exploration of what death really is, what it is not, and why understanding it may be the most important preparation we can make while we are alive.

This discussion is not about morbidity, fear, or a fascination with dying. On the contrary, it is about clarity, consciousness, and freedom. Talking about death does not mean wanting to die. It means wanting to understand existence itself. Throughout the conversation, Alex and José Luis dismantle common religious narratives, cultural taboos, and fear-based beliefs, replacing them with a radically different perspective: death as a transition of experience, not the end of being.

Why Death Is the Last Great Taboo

In most societies, death is something whispered about, postponed, or hidden behind rituals and euphemisms. People avoid the subject because it confronts them with uncertainty. From childhood, we are taught that life begins at birth and ends at death, with everything meaningful happening in between. This narrow framing creates fear, attachment, and resistance.

As Alex explains, even speaking openly about death often triggers concern from others. If you talk about preparing for death, people assume something is wrong, that you are depressed or suicidal. This misunderstanding reveals how deeply conditioned we are to see death as an enemy rather than a natural transition.

José Luis emphasizes that avoiding the topic does not protect us. It leaves us unprepared. Understanding death, on the other hand, can radically change how we live. It can dissolve fear, reduce attachment, and bring clarity to what truly matters.

Physical Death vs. the “Great Death”

A central theme of the conversation is the distinction between physical death and what José Luis calls “the great death.” Physical death is the end of the body and the personality known as “me.” It is the moment when the character we have played in this life comes to an end.

The great death, however, is something entirely different. It is not the death of the body but the dissolution of all identification, memory, and impurity. It is the final return to the source, the absolute, where even consciousness as we know it dissolves into pure being.

Most human beings, according to José Luis, do not experience the great death immediately. Instead, consciousness continues, carrying memories, impressions, and unresolved attachments. These impurities are what lead to continued experiences, cycles, or returns.

The Tunnel, the Light, and the Void

Many near-death experiences describe tunnels, lights, beings, or loved ones. José Luis offers a striking interpretation of these phenomena. He explains that what one experiences after physical death depends largely on the level of consciousness cultivated during life.

Those who have not entered deep silence or inner stillness tend to encounter images, symbols, and familiar forms. These experiences can be beautiful and comforting, but they are still part of the mind’s imagery. They belong to the realm of form.

Those who have touched profound silence may encounter something else entirely: the void. This void is not emptiness in the sense of nothingness. It is the absence of form, identity, and thought. It cannot be described because description requires objects, and in the void there are none.

As Alex shares through personal conversations with people who have had near-death experiences, those who reach this void often describe it as total detachment, total absence of judgment, and an indescribable sense of completeness. They frequently say they did not want to return.

Consciousness Is What Is Immortal

One of the most important ideas repeated throughout the discussion is that what is immortal is not the personality, the body, or the story we tell ourselves about who we are. What is immortal is consciousness itself.

Thoughts, memories, and identities are not personal possessions. They are collective patterns. When the body dies, these patterns dissolve. What remains is the awareness that was always present, observing the experience.

José Luis uses a powerful metaphor: consciousness is like a movie screen. The images on the screen change constantly, but the screen itself remains untouched. Life is the movie. Death is the end of one film, not the destruction of the screen.

Why Memory Prevents Final Liberation

According to José Luis, memory is the key factor that prevents consciousness from returning fully to the absolute. Memory creates continuity, identity, and attachment. As long as memory remains, there is still a sense of “someone” who experienced something.

This is why many traditions speak of purification, silence, or emptiness. These are not moral concepts. They are descriptions of a state in which memory loses its grip. When all memory dissolves, there is nothing left to return. That is the great death.

Until then, consciousness continues to experience, not as punishment or reward, but as expression.

Religion, Judgment, and Fear

The conversation also challenges traditional religious views of death, judgment, heaven, and hell. Alex questions how a supposedly loving and infinite source could operate through punishment, reward, or eternal judgment.

Justice, as José Luis points out, is a human concept. Nature does not judge. Water does not discriminate between good and bad. Existence simply allows.

The idea that suffering is punishment for past actions, or that children suffer because of karmic debt, is rejected as a projection of human morality onto the infinite. From this perspective, suffering is not imposed by a higher power but arises from ignorance, attachment, and identification.

Attachment, Grief, and Letting Go

One of the most emotionally grounded parts of the conversation addresses grief and attachment. When loved ones die, people naturally ask: Where are they now? Will I see them again?

Alex acknowledges how difficult these questions are and emphasizes compassion. At the same time, he invites a radical reframe: the experience has ended. The character has dissolved back into consciousness.

This does not mean love disappears. Love, in this view, was never about possession or continuity. It was an expression within the experience. Honoring loved ones means living fully, loving deeply while they are here, and letting go when they are not.

The Illusion of Separation

A recurring theme is the illusion of individuality. We feel separate because we identify with the body and the story. But at a deeper level, there is only one consciousness expressing itself through countless forms.

Alex uses metaphors like pixels on a screen or pieces of a puzzle. Each piece looks separate, but none exist independently of the whole. Separation is functional, not real.

Understanding this does not make life meaningless. It makes it sacred. Every interaction becomes consciousness meeting itself.

Silence as the Direct Path

José Luis repeatedly returns to silence as the direct path to understanding death. Silence does not mean absence of sound. It means absence of inner movement, judgment, and duality.

Practices like breath awareness, meditation, and mantras are not techniques to control thoughts but ways to let them pass. In silence, the sense of self begins to loosen.

Silence burns impurities, not through effort but through clarity.

Life Has No Purpose Because Life Is the Purpose

Perhaps one of the most radical statements in the conversation is that life has no external purpose. There is no goal to achieve, no lesson to complete, no final exam.

Life exists because existence must include everything. The absolute must contain both the highest and the lowest, the most refined and the most dense. Humanity matters because it contains all levels at once.

Fulfillment arises not from achieving something but from realizing what you already are.

Living Differently When Death Is Understood

When death is no longer feared, life changes. Competition, pride, resentment, and fear lose their grip. Relationships become more honest. Love becomes less conditional.

Alex closes the conversation by inviting viewers to discover their true self, not through belief but through inquiry. Asking simple questions like “Who am I?” and “What is aware right now?” can begin a profound transformation.

Death, in this understanding, is not an ending to dread but a truth to embrace. The great death is not something to rush toward but something to recognize as inevitable and beautiful.

When the time comes, it will not be a loss. It will be a return.

For more deep conversations like this one, visit TheAlexShow.TV on YouTube and explore additional episodes that challenge reality, consciousness, and everything we think we know about existence.

You are the origin of everything

You Are the Origin of Everything: Consciousness, Creation, and the Illusion of Separation

The idea that you are the origin of everything challenges nearly every belief system humanity has built. In this episode of TheAlexShow.TV, Alex revisits one of the most fundamental truths explored since the very beginning of the channel: reality does not exist independently of consciousness. It is sustained, shaped, and experienced through it.

This message is not about ego, superiority, or personal power over others. In fact, Alex makes it clear that misunderstanding this truth is precisely what leads to imbalance, control, and suffering. To understand that you are the origin is not to elevate yourself above others, but to recognize that there is no “other” in the way we have been taught to perceive it.

You Are Not a Fragment of Creation

A recurring metaphor throughout this episode is both simple and profound: you are not a drop of water in the ocean—you are the entire ocean contained within a single drop. This perspective dissolves the idea that creation is something external or distant.

From this point of view, existence is not made of separate beings competing for space, resources, or meaning. Instead, it is a unified field experiencing itself through countless perspectives. Each individual life is a localized expression of the same totality.

This understanding aligns with what many ancient traditions referred to as the Law of One or the principle of oneness. Separation, according to Alex, is not real—it is experiential.

The Danger of Ego Misinterpretation

Alex is careful to address one of the most common distortions of this concept. When the ego hears “you are the origin of everything,” it may translate that message into domination, entitlement, or superiority.

This is where imbalance begins.

The ego interprets unity as hierarchy: if I am everything, then I must be above others. But this interpretation violates the very laws that allow creation to function harmoniously.

In this episode, Alex outlines three fundamental universal principles:

  • The law of non-interference
  • The law of balance
  • The law of free will

Breaking any of these leads to distortion. Breaking all three leads to collapse.

The Law of Non-Interference

Understanding yourself as the origin does not grant permission to manipulate others. On the contrary, it imposes responsibility. Non-interference means allowing others to experience their own path without imposing your will, beliefs, or desires upon them.

Alex emphasizes that free will ends the moment it interferes with someone else’s sovereignty. Any action rooted in control—even when justified as “help” or “justice”—creates imbalance.

This principle applies not only to actions, but to emotional and energetic interference as well.

The Law of Balance

The law of balance reminds us that no being is above or below another. All expressions of consciousness are equal in essence, regardless of their role, intelligence, or material circumstances.

From this perspective, wealth, status, intelligence, and power do not make one more valuable than another. They are merely conditions within the experience.

Balance is broken the moment comparison enters the equation.

The Law of Free Will

Free will exists within the boundaries of balance and non-interference. You are free to act, choose, and explore, but not to impose.

Alex explains that many systems of control exploit misunderstandings of free will by encouraging entitlement and moral justification. This creates endless conflict while appearing righteous.

True freedom is quiet. It does not need validation.

Reality Is Sustained by Attention

One of the most practical insights from You Are the Origin of Everything is the idea that nothing persists without energy, and energy follows attention.

Problems are not fixed objects. They are patterns repeatedly energized by thought, emotion, and reaction. Worry, rumination, and anticipation are not signs of responsibility—they are mechanisms that keep situations alive.

Alex offers everyday examples: replaying arguments, reliving regrets, anticipating lack. In each case, the external situation remains unchanged, but the internal energy feeding it intensifies.

Letting Energy Pass Through You

Rather than resisting or suppressing experience, Alex suggests allowing events to pass through awareness without attachment. This does not mean indifference or passivity. It means non-identification.

When emotions are allowed to move freely, they lose their grip. When they are resisted or justified, they solidify.

This principle applies equally to joy and suffering. Attachment to either creates dependency.

Manifestation Is Not Control

Another common misunderstanding addressed in this episode is manifestation. While consciousness does shape reality, this does not mean snapping fingers and demanding outcomes.

Manifestation operates through alignment, not force.

Alex explains that opening yourself to possibilities creates pathways, not guarantees. When resistance dissolves, intuition emerges. Opportunities arise not through effort, but through resonance.

This is why letting go often produces better results than constant striving.

The Density of This Reality

Alex acknowledges that this reality is dense by design. Physical needs, health, money, and responsibility create friction. These conditions are not failures—they are features of the experience.

Rather than denying these challenges, the key is not allowing them to define identity.

You are not your circumstances. You are the awareness experiencing them.

Harmony Over Resistance

Harmony does not mean perfection. It means coherence.

When actions, thoughts, and emotions align, life becomes less reactive and more fluid. Solutions emerge organically, often from unexpected directions.

Alex notes that intuition frequently guides change: altering habits, adjusting diet, shifting relationships, or opening to new opportunities—without force or obsession.

The Role of Emotion

In the final part of the episode, Alex addresses emotions such as rage, fear, envy, and violence. These emotions are often defended as justified or necessary, but the real question is simpler:

Do they work for you?

If an emotion fragments peace, clarity, and harmony, it does not serve, regardless of justification.

Letting go is not weakness. It is efficiency.

Discovering Your True Self

The episode closes with an invitation rather than a command. Discovering your true self is a personal process. No one can do it for you.

By spending even a few minutes in stillness—asking who you are beyond labels and stories—old structures begin to dissolve.

Competition fades. Comparison loses meaning. Identity softens.

Freedom emerges not as escape, but as recognition.

Final Reflection

You are the origin of everything not because you control reality, but because reality appears through you.

This understanding does not inflate the ego. It dissolves it.

And from that dissolution, harmony naturally follows.

For more explorations into consciousness, reality, and self-discovery, visit TheAlexShow.TV and continue the journey.