// // // // Existential Exploration: An Honest Reflection of Wholeness

Saturday, 23 November 2024

An Honest Reflection of Wholeness

Wholeness is a concept that feels simple at first glance—being complete, undivided, or unified. Yet, the more I reflect on it, the more elusive it becomes. What does it really mean to be whole? Is it something inherent, or is it something we perceive, assign, or even strive for?

For me, the only wholeness I can truly know is the one I call my own: the whole that is my consciousness, the experience of being. When I focus inward, my body feels like just a part of something larger—an instrument for carrying this awareness, this life, this mind. My consciousness feels like the true whole. Everything I perceive, think, and feel unfolds within this space, making it seem as though the entire world is part of me.

But then, I wonder: is this wholeness all there is?

To imagine that my consciousness, my experience, is just a part of a greater whole feels like a leap of faith. It’s not something I can directly perceive. I can see connections—relationships, systems, and patterns that suggest I’m part of something larger—but these are ideas, not certainties.

When I try to envision this greater whole, it feels both awe-inspiring and humbling. It’s like imagining being a cell in a vast body or a star in an endless galaxy. It suggests that while I experience myself as whole, that wholeness may only be part of a larger truth—one that I can’t fully grasp.

At the same time, I see the limits of many "wholes" around me. A tool has functional unity, but its wholeness is only an appearance—it’s a collection of parts shaped for a purpose. Even objects in nature, like a tree or a mountain, are not truly whole; they are parts of ecosystems, cycles, and greater processes. Wholeness in these cases seems conditional, fragmented, or relational.

So, what does true wholeness mean?

I think it might lie in something more fundamental. Wholeness might not be about isolated forms or purposes but about relationships. It’s the interconnectedness of all things—the way every part finds its place in the infinite whole. Perhaps that infinite whole is what some call God, or existence itself.

And yet, even this idea brings me back to myself. How can I know the infinite whole if the only wholeness I truly experience is my own? Maybe the leap of faith is trusting that my wholeness is not separate but a reflection, a fractal, of something greater.

For now, I can’t claim to fully understand wholeness, but I feel it. It’s in the unity of my thoughts, the way my body and mind work together, the connection I feel to others, and the mystery of existence itself. Whether I am a part of a greater whole or the entirety is part of me, wholeness is something I live, question, and explore every day.

And perhaps that’s enough for now.

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