Something Missing and the Belief That You Are Lacking
May 27, 2026

Something Missing and the Belief That You Are Lacking

Algo que falta y la creencia de que estás incompleto

This session opens with a guided meditation on the pervasive sense that something is missing, reframing it not as a personal flaw or childhood wound but as a present-moment belief about what we are. Through dialogues, the teacher explores how identifying with thoughts and memories veils the miracle already here, distinguishes true faith from blind belief, and shows how seeing interpretations as interpretations opens up creative responses to reactivity and conflict.

sense of lack dissatisfaction belief and identity the observer present moment self-judgment relationships reactivity miracle of experience faith and trust meditation non-identification
Something Missing
meditation
Something Missing
Releasing the constant sense that something is missing, and discovering that this moment, just as it is, may already be complete.
Knowing What You Are
dialogue
Knowing What You Are
A student recognizes a deep, lifelong sense of inadequacy and traces it to childhood. The teacher redirects: the sense of lack is not a personal condition inherited from the past, but a belief held in the present about what you are.
What Is More Real, the Seer or the Seen
dialogue
What Is More Real, the Seer or the Seen
A student feels trapped in a habit of doing and self-judgment. The teacher redirects from the search for a personal problem toward recognizing the one who observes, and toward a trust that rests on direct experience rather than belief.
The Room with Two Doors
dialogue
The Room with Two Doors
A conversation about reactivity in family conflict, and how the belief in only two options, withdrawal or explosion, hides the many creative responses that become visible once we stop taking our interpretations as reality.
The Nice Guy and the Vulnerability Beneath
dialogue
The Nice Guy and the Vulnerability Beneath
A reflection on avoidance, conflict, and the fear that keeps us pleasing, and how spaciousness includes rather than escapes the vulnerability at its core.