What If There's Actually One Mind Running the Show?
You know that feeling when your brain is like a browser with 47 tabs open, three of them playing music, and one definitely has a virus? Yeah, me too.
But here's something that's been messing with my head lately: What if all that mental chaos isn't actually the real story?
This week we're looking at this wild idea that there's actually just one Mind—capital M—running the entire show. Not your mind, not my mind, not your boss's mind or your neighbor's mind or that guy on Twitter who has Opinions about everything. Just one.
I know, I know. Sounds like spiritual bypassing dressed up in fancy language. But stick with me.
Take Solomon. Kid asks for one thing: an understanding heart. Not riches, not revenge on his enemies, not even a really good TikTok algorithm. Just the ability to discern what's actually going on. And what happens? He gets wisdom that becomes legendary.
Or that woman who argued with Jesus about crumbs. She knew something the disciples didn't—that even the smallest bit of truth has massive power. She wasn't asking Jesus to manufacture a miracle. She was recognizing what was already true.
Here's the thing that keeps hitting me: What if we're not trying to get our minds straight? What if we're learning to recognize the Mind that's already straight?
The Canaanite woman didn't grovel. Paul didn't panic when a snake bit him. Solomon didn't pretend to know it all. They all did something similar—they recognized a different operating system. One that doesn't run on anxiety, competition, or the need to figure everything out.
This isn't about positive thinking or mind control. It's about discovering that the intelligence that keeps planets in orbit and flowers blooming is the same intelligence that's actually governing your life—whether you realize it or not.
And here's the kicker: when you start operating from this understanding, the chaos doesn't magically disappear. But your relationship to it completely changes. Because you're not trying to manage chaos anymore. You're recognizing the harmony that was there all along.