Abstract This text describes how the liminal state—often perceived as an exceptional or fleeting experience—can become a stable function within everyday life. The author explains how the unification between the Inner Energetic Self and the incarnated self dissolves duality, produces stability, and transforms emergence into direct action. The liminal is presented not as an extraordinary realm but as a “living beyond” that can be inhabited. This work is part of The Liminal Field, a corpus dedicated to the operational topology of consciousness. Description This text explores how the liminal state can become a stable mode of being rather than an occasional experience. The author describes the unification between the Inner Energetic Self and the incarnated self as the key to dissolving duality and achieving a state of continuous emergence, where action arises directly from interiority. The liminal is presented as a “living beyond” that can be inhabited in everyday life. This contribution belongs to The Liminal Field, a corpus dedicated to the operational structure of consciousness. Extended Description (EN) Everyday Life develops the idea that the liminal state—traditionally perceived as a transient or exceptional condition—can evolve into a stable operational mode within daily existence. The text proposes that liminality, when integrated through the unification of the incarnated self and the Inner Energetic Self, ceases to be a threshold and becomes a function of continuity. This transformation marks the passage from episodic perception to structural presence. The work articulates a model in which interiority and exteriority merge into a single field of action. The Inner Energetic Self, once considered distant or inaccessible, becomes the operative center of daily life. Through this integration, duality collapses: the distinction between spirit and matter, between inner and outer, dissolves into a unified energetic topology. The liminal thus becomes not a place to reach, but a state to inhabit—a living beyond that coexists with ordinary experience. The text further redefines reincarnation as an in‑life process rather than a post‑mortem event. The human being reincarnates while alive by acquiring and embodying their energetic nature. This acquisition enables direct connection with the Higher Self, a link impossible for the physical human alone. The collapse of the myth of reincarnation reveals a new continuity between energetic and incarnated states, where life itself becomes the field of transformation. By describing the liminal as a stable mode of being, Everyday Life contributes to the broader ontology of The Liminal Field, offering a framework for understanding how consciousness can operate as a continuous resonance between energetic and material dimensions. It proposes that stability, rather than transcendence, is the true mark of spiritual evolution. Keywords Liminality · Stability · Energetic Self · Consciousness · Duality Dissolution · Reincarnation · Synchronization · Ontology · Phenomenology · Everyday Existence
Oliva FMOO (Tue,) studied this question.
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