Stillness Is the Common Path

THE FLASH


Key Takeaways

  • Stillness is the shared mechanism beneath mysticism, therapy, and healing.

  • When stillness is lost, we mistake productivity and control for meaning.

  • Healing begins by subtracting noise, not adding belief.


Core Statement
Across religions, therapies, and philosophies, the instruction is the same: be still.

Why It Matters
While mysticism, religion, and psychedelics shape a common path, this exploration isn’t really about any one of them. It’s about what happens when a culture erodes stillness, uproots grounding, and blocks transcendence, then wonders why people feel hollow, insatiable, and restless. We’re optimized for productivity, autonomy, and control. As development increasingly targets the mind, what’s cut from the heart is access to something larger than the self: a safe space to commune with the forces of creation.

Lost in the domestication of our humanity, stillness is a place we can still cultivate and revisit, but it requires effort. Stillness is spiritual technology, a shared mechanism across mystical traditions and modern therapy. It can be defined less by what it adds (insight) than what it removes (interference). I’m reminded of the overbearing, toxic Chef David overseeing Carmy’s development in The Bear, “subtract!” became the repetitive invitation to achieve excellence. Psychedelic therapy works in a similar way, not by inserting meaning, but by quieting the noise that blocks perception. Mystical experience isn’t about adding belief, but rather subtracting out the noise. The so-called God-shaped hole isn’t doctrinal; it’s relational.

Reflection Prompt
Where in your life are you adding effort when subtraction might restore clarity?

With love & light,
John Moos, MD
Soul Surgeon

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Can Mysticism Heal the God-Shaped Hole In Our Hearts?