Awareness of the Subjective is Part of the Shift
Topics:
Awareness of the Subjective is Part of the Shift
Friday, August 29, 2025 (Private/In Person)
Participants: Mary (Michael) and Jean (Lyla)
(Excerpt begins partway through session)
JEAN: What you're bringing up now and learning how to work with the subjective awareness and making it more a part: Is this something COMPLETELY new in the history of mankind? Or has it been done before, and we've lost it? Do you understand my question?
ELIAS: I do.
JEAN: Because everybody… you know, Seth started this whole “you create your reality” thing, but he got into the CONCEPT of it but you're bringing in to the HOW. Seth never brought in the how.
ELIAS: Correct.
JEAN: Let me say where I'm going with this: because people have been creating physical manifestations (laughing) –
ELIAS: Forever.
JEAN: – forever! And a lot of the physical manifestations are because of this.
ELIAS: Yes.
JEAN: Okay.
ELIAS: But no. Yes, they absolutely are, but not because the people were AWARE of that. Therefore, is this something that is completely new? Yes. In the sense of it is new for you to be AWARE of that part of you.
JEAN: So new in the history of civilization and mankind? (Elias nods yes) Holy moly!
ELIAS: Yes. Yes. No, this has never been done before.
JEAN: And is this because we've experienced this aspect up until now of illness and disease and da-da-da-da-da and we're tired of it, and now we're ready to… ?
ELIAS: No. It's part of the Shift, and it's part of self-awareness. It's part of becoming more self-aware: being aware of ALL of you rather than HALF of you. And in that, beginning to recognize and understand that there's another part of you – which I've expressed from the very beginning of my interactions with all of you, that there's no such thing as subconscious, that it's simply that you don't pay ATTENTION to that part of you, that subjective part of you. It's not hidden from you, and it's not as difficult to find or to see as you think it is; it's simply that you have kept your attention so fixed on your OBJECTIVE awareness that you're completely familiar with that. And it's so much a part of your life that it's the entirety of your life: It's what you pay attention to when you are awake, and it's what you pay attention to when you are asleep. You interpret your subjective movement and actions with objective imagery in dreams. Therefore, even when you're sleeping, even when you're dreaming, you're concentrating your attention on the objective part of it.
And in this, that's how it's always been in relation to humans. You've always done this. You've always created in relation to the subjective, because that's where your inspiration comes from. Therefore, you've always (slight pause) invented in relation to the subjective part of yourselves, but that's not what you've ever looked at. You simply look at “you have an inspiration. You have a revelation, you have a realization,” and you put it together, and you create something or you invent something, or you recognize something, and that becomes another part of your reality, and it becomes another part of your objective reality, but you haven't actually questioned.
Even after Freud and his introduction to the subconscious, you haven't explored that. He began exploring that, but it was VERY colored and distorted by objective experiences and objective explanations for those experiences, not what the actual subjective aspect of the experiences were, or what you think of as the subconscious – and his expression that that is completely hidden from you, that you can't find that, only he could find that, or (laughing) Jung could find that, but YOU can't find that. But that's not true.
And in relation to this shift, it is very important that you are expanding your awareness, and part of that expansion of your personal awareness, your self-awareness, is to be exploring that part of you that IS subjective because it's involved with everything you do. Every choice you make, it's involved with. Therefore, that is a very important part of shifting.
Now, does that mean that everyone has to delve into the deep recesses of the subjective awareness of themselves? No, because most people are surface, and therefore they won't. They will to the degree that they can, and that's enough. For those of you that are thinkers, you will likely move into a much deeper awareness of what the subjective does, and then you'll be able to use that in not only your choices but in relation to inventions and creations, such as Einstein… or Nash. I'd say he came closer than Einstein.
JEAN: Nash? Who’s Nash? [1]
ELIAS: John Nash, who is a mathematician, who also battled with schizophrenia – brilliant, brilliant individual – and learned how to manage his condition, if you will, which almost no one has in relation to what people identify as mental illness, and especially in an age in which there was NO managing and in an age of electroshock therapy. But I would say that this is an individual that came closer to a recognition of the subjective part of himself than even Einstein. And in that, he wasn't actually looking for it, and he wasn't actually looking at it as (slight pause) the other half of himself that could be good, or should be paid attention to; rather looking at it as the subconscious part of him that should be not paid attention to.
But – I would say that, yes, as a matter of course, in relation to has this ever been done before? No, it has not. Humans have never come to this type of self-awareness before, not even the Egyptians!
JEAN: You've read my mind about the Egyptians. (Elias laughs) Thank you. Thank you, Elias, for that.
[1] Aspects of John Nash’s life were depicted in the 2001 biographical film “A Beautiful Mind.” Nash shared the 1994 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences with two other game theorists and was also awarded other high-prestige prizes.
(Excerpt ends after 12 minutes)
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