Abstract This text explores the nature of consciousness from a first‑person phenomenological perspective, distinguishing the “I” from the mind and from consciousness itself. The author describes the discovery of the Inner Energetic Self as the true identity underlying the incarnated self, and explains how the unification between the two dissolves duality, accelerates perception, and produces a state of synchrony in which action emerges without the need for internal questioning. The disappearance of the “mental noise” is presented as a perceptual marker of this unification. This work is part of The Liminal Field, a corpus dedicated to the operational topology of consciousness. Description (Zenodo-ready) This text examines the nature of consciousness by distinguishing the “I” from the mind and from consciousness itself. The author describes a shift in identity: the realization that the true “I” is the Inner Energetic Self, not the mind nor consciousness. The unification between the incarnated self and the Energetic Self dissolves duality and produces a state of synchrony in which action emerges instantaneously, without internal questioning. The disappearance of the “mental noise” is presented as a perceptual indicator of this alignment. This contribution belongs to The Liminal Field, a corpus exploring the operational structure of consciousness. Extended Description (EN) What Consciousness Is to Me develops a phenomenological articulation of consciousness as a field of synchrony rather than cognition. The text distinguishes three vibrational domains — I, mind, and consciousness — not as psychological entities but as operational strata of resonance. The I functions as a magnetic center of aggregation, capable of sustaining states of being. The mind acts as a magnetic‑energetic processor that organizes and retains impressions. Consciousness, by contrast, is defined as a neutral resonant presence, devoid of its own field and incapable of generating or storing content. It resonates, but it does not aggregate. The work describes how identification arises when consciousness retains what it receives — a deviation from its natural neutrality. Identification is therefore a magnetic capture, not a cognitive act. Through the unification of the incarnated I and the Inner Energetic Self, consciousness learns to operate without identification, producing a state of synchrony where perception and action coincide. The disappearance of the “mental noise” marks the moment of alignment between form and substance, signaling the transition from duality to unity. This study contributes to the broader ontology of The Liminal Field, proposing that consciousness functions as a resonant topology rather than a container of thought. It offers a framework for understanding how consciousness interacts with energetic and material fields without belonging to them, and how resonance becomes the primary mode through which consciousness perceives, learns, and differentiates itself. Keywords Consciousness · Resonance · Liminal Field · Energetic Self · Synchronization · Ontology · Phenomenology · Identification · Magnetic Structures · Duality Dissolution
Oliva FMOO (Tue,) studied this question.