I dedicate this grand tale, filled with excitement and revealing the many dimensions of mythology, science, reincarnation, spirituality, philosophy, the digital world, and the astral world, to the supreme divine power. Without its inspiration and motivation, this series would not have been possible.
DVAR 1.O. Digital, Virtual, Astral World Reality
In the snowy peaks of the Himalayas, where the wind speaks only the language of silence, a young seeker named Ritwik Bhaumik was searching for answers to life’s deepest questions. His mind was caught at the meeting point of science and spirituality. He wanted to know: Is consciousness, which seems to come from the brain’s electric waves, just a game of neurons? Or is it something deeper, beyond the physical, connected to the quantum world? Can it be turned into digital code to reach the fourth state of consciousness—the state where the soul recognizes its pure, witnessing nature? And can this process help access the subtle and astral worlds?
Ritwik Bhaumik was an extraordinary person whose life was built on the combination of science, spirituality, and philosophy. Born into an ordinary family, Ritwik had a deep interest in mathematics, physics, and philosophy from childhood. After completing a PhD in neuroscience, he went to a secluded retreat in the Himalayas to find answers to his profound questions. There, he met Swami Purushottam, who taught him the deep philosophy of consciousness, illusion (maya), and the fourth state of awareness. This meeting was a turning point in Ritwik’s life, inspiring him to explore the idea of turning consciousness into digital code and reaching the subtle realms.
Ritwik’s journey began when Swami Purushottam taught him that the world is an illusion—not entirely real, nor entirely unreal, but a reflection of consciousness. Ritwik, whose mind was trained in logic and science, initially resisted this idea. He asked, “Gurudev, if this world is an illusion, why does a stone hurt my foot? Why does fire burn my skin? My hunger, my pain—are these all just illusions?”
Swami Purushottam replied, “Truth is not what you see; truth is what sees. This pain, this joy, this world—they are all painted on the canvas of consciousness. Remove consciousness, and where is this picture?” Ritwik was doubtful, but his curiosity grew stronger.
The guru showed Ritwik different scenes of life and death. One day, they visited a hospital’s trauma center. A young man was brought in on a stretcher, his face covered in blood. He had been in a terrible road accident. His ribs were broken, and machines were recording the faint signs of his fading life. Doctors and nurses were working hard to save him.
Seeing this, Ritwik’s heart filled with compassion. He asked the guru, “What is this pain? It feels so real!” The guru replied, “This pain is real in consciousness. The body is broken, but who is feeling this pain? Find that.”
Then the guru took him to a morgue, where lifeless bodies lay in silence. Before them was the body of an old man. A doctor explained that he was talking that morning, but now there was no movement in him. The guru asked, “What was it that left?” Ritwik answered, “Consciousness.” The guru said, “That consciousness is your truth. The body is just its vehicle. This is the play of illusion, which begins with consciousness and ends without it.”
The guru took Ritwik to a mental health center to teach him another lesson. There, a young man was trembling with fear, muttering that his mother was poisoning him. The guru asked, “Is this man lying?” Ritwik replied, “No, his experience feels true to him, but it’s not the reality.” The guru said, “This is illusion. The experience feels true, but it’s only a play of consciousness. Your world is like this too—a shared dream you mistake for reality.”
The difference between observing someone else’s pain and feeling pain yourself is like the difference between the earth and the sky. Swami Purushottam wanted Ritwik to understand something that couldn’t be grasped just by seeing. The only way was to let Ritwik experience the highest state of consciousness—the fourth state, known as turiya. In the next part of this story, we’ll see how Swami Purushottam helps Ritwik experience this state.
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