
Emotional Release, Fully Healing, and the Bhagavad Gita 2.47
February 25, 2024
8 min read
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{Body}
Unable to display emotions
We take displaying emotions very personally, as though they defined our very essence.
If you cry, you’re weak. If you’re angry, you’re a b*tch. If you’re afraid, you’re faithless.
And yet…you don’t confuse bouts of diarrhea or vomiting as being a part of your character, do you?
Of course not! They are seen as natural processes for getting toxic gunk out of your body.
So why is it that we believe emotional outbursts (crying, screaming, punching, trembling, etc.) are more telling of who we are?
Perhaps it is because of the many subconscious cues we receive from others:
Frustration directed towards us as children when we had temper tantrums.
Discomfort we saw in our peers’ eyes when we cried in front of them.
Judgement we felt while vocalizing our fears to a group of strangers.
When you start to see your emotions as impersonal as breathing or digesting food, they will be much easier to ride and feel.
{Mind}
Is it possible to FULLY heal?
It depends on how you’re defining “fully healed”.
If by “fully healed” you mean no longer feeling pain and avoiding biological death, then no — being fully healed is impossible in our current form.
If, however, by “fully healed” you mean being free from the suffering that arises as a result of thinking you are separate from God/Source/Universal Intelligence, then yes — being fully healed is absolutely possible.
How can I be so sure?
Because if this type of healing were fundamentally impossible, we would basically be living in hell.
Think about it like this:
If life is a video game, and you’re the main character, then there *must* be some way to win that game. Otherwise, we’re all just like the story of Sisyphus, endlessly pushing a boulder up a hill, only for it to roll back down the moment we’re about to summit.
There must be a checkpoint you and I can reach wherein we can consider ourselves fully healed, otherwise we are doomed to live out an insane cycle of never-ending misery.
If you want all of my thoughts on the topic, read and/or listen to the full essay I released a couple of years ago.
{Soul}
If you plant a seed, are you able to precisely predict if/when the flower will bloom and exactly what it will look like?
Of course not — you can only ever have guesses based on past experience, never certainty.
It’s possible to understand this principle intellectually, and yet not apply its wisdom into everyday life:
We bite into the food at our favorite restaurant and get disappointed when it doesn’t taste as good as other times.
We deep clean the kitchen for our partner/kids/housemates and get upset when it isn’t acknowledged.
We spend months working our a** off at our jobs and suffer when someone else gets the promotion instead.
When an outcome doesn’t match our desired expectation, we tend to take it personally, as though the Universe were momentarily performing an injustice against our very being.
This is normal, but completely insane.
Is there not a larger picture always coming into focus? Is our limited mind really able to assess fairness? Do we not trust the Universe that we are completely inseparable from?

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