Atlas's Substack Podcast

Atlas Reed

Practical wisdom for spiritual awakening and inner transformation. atlasrelics95.substack.com

  1. قبل ساعتين

    The Seven Levels of Consciousness

    Consciousness refuses to make sense. Color, sound, scent, the ache of heartbreak, the warmth of love, none of it should exist the way it does. We have charted the observable universe, mapped every neuron in the brain, and built machines that speak and reason like us, yet the most basic fact of being alive, that it feels like something to be you, remains unexplained. Every person who has ever lived has experienced consciousness directly, and still it resists explanation. Mystics, scientists, and philosophers keep arriving at the same conclusion from different directions: awareness is not one flat experience. It moves through levels, and the further down you go, the stranger and more expansive it becomes. Level One: Deep Sleep This is the state we enter every night without a second thought, and it is also the strangest one of all. In deep sleep, the world dissolves completely. There is no self, no dream, no story, only a stillness so total that even the idea of stillness disappears with it. You cannot understand deep sleep by imagining it, any more than a sighted person can understand blindness by closing their eyes. All we know for certain is that awareness switches off and then, hours later, switches back on, and somehow you know that time passed even though nothing was there to witness it. Neuroscience calls this the delta wave state, a slow rhythm under four cycles per second where the body repairs tissue, resets the nervous system, and consolidates memory. But underneath the biology sits a genuine paradox. Something registers that nothing happened, otherwise waking up would feel like utter confusion rather than continuity. Ancient traditions named this state long before EEG machines existed. In Vedanta it is called sushupti, the self resting in its unmanifested form. Buddhist thought treats it as a glimpse of nirvana without the insight attached to it. Whatever the label, deep sleep functions as both an ending and a beginning, a nightly dissolving of the self that makes the next day’s waking possible. Level Two: Dreaming From that void, fragments begin to move. Images assemble themselves out of nothing, and suddenly you are somewhere else entirely, flying, falling, speaking to people who do not exist and yet feel completely real. Dreaming happens during REM sleep, when the body stays paralyzed but the brain lights up with activity. Emotion, memory, and imagination combine without any of the constraints that govern waking life. In a dream, you are simultaneously the author, the architect, and the character wandering through a world you built and immediately forgot you built. Cultures have interpreted this differently. Hindu philosophy calls the dream state swapna, a distorted mirror of waking reality. The Greeks read dreams as messages sent by the gods. Depth psychology treated them as coded messages from the unconscious mind. Modern neuroscience prefers to call it memory consolidation, the brain sorting the day’s residue into symbolic narrative. None of these framings fully capture the strangeness of it. A nightmare can spike your heart rate. A vivid dream can leave you shaken or comforted for days. For something built entirely out of imagination, dreams leave remarkably real footprints, and they hint at something unsettling: if the mind can construct a convincing world every single night, what guarantee do we have that waking life is any different? Level Three: Waking Then you open your eyes. Light, color, the weight of your own body, the layered sound of a normal morning, all of it floods back in at once. This is waking consciousness, the state where most of us spend the overwhelming majority of our lives, and the one we mistake for the full picture of reality. The brain is processing billions of signals every second, converting raw sensory noise into a coherent, three-dimensional experience convincing enough to navigate by. Researchers describe the mechanism that stitches this narrative together as the default mode network, the part of the mind responsible for the ongoing sense of being a single continuous person moving through time. But the longer you examine waking life, the less solid it looks. Optical illusions prove the senses are not reliable. Other species perceive entirely different realities: some animals see infrared light, others navigate by magnetic fields or echolocation, and people with certain forms of synesthesia see color when they hear music. If perception varies this dramatically across nervous systems, there is no single objective reality being revealed, only a version filtered through whatever equipment happens to be doing the perceiving. Philosophers reached similar conclusions long before neuroscience existed. Descartes wondered how anyone could be certain they were not dreaming right now. Kant argued that we never perceive the world directly, only a mental model shaped by the structure of cognition itself. Contemporary thinkers describe perception as an interface built for survival rather than truth, meaning the senses are not showing you reality so much as hiding it behind symbols useful enough to keep you alive. Waking life feels more solid than a dream mainly because of consequence and consensus. Other people appear to share the same sky, the same physical laws, the same continuity from one day to the next. But that shared agreement is itself a kind of collective construction, reinforced through language and memory rather than proof of anything absolute. Waking is not the opposite of dreaming. It is simply the most persistent dream, stable enough to convince everyone at once. For most people, the map of consciousness stops here. Waking, dreaming, and deep sleep make up the entire known territory. But there are deeper layers that only reveal themselves once the surface of the mind grows quiet enough to notice them. Level Four: Transcendental Consciousness Beyond the three ordinary states lies something that does not fit neatly into any of them. It is not sleep, not imagination, not ordinary alertness. In transcendental consciousness, the body and senses remain present, but thought slows dramatically and then falls away entirely. Attention turns inward and rests on awareness itself rather than on any object of awareness. Meditators across unrelated traditions describe the same experience: being without doing, awareness detached from the constant churn of thought. EEG studies of experienced meditators show something measurable happening here too. The usually asynchronous activity between the brain’s hemispheres begins to synchronize, waveforms aligning the way instruments do when they fall into the same rhythm. The Upanishads call this turiya, the fourth state beyond waking, dreaming, and deep sleep. Descartes built an entire philosophy on the claim that thinking proves existence, yet in this state, thinking dissolves and a sense of being remains anyway. Many describe it as a feeling of returning home, discovering that what they spent a lifetime searching for was the very awareness doing the searching. Level Five: Cosmic Consciousness Eventually the stillness stops fading when the eyes open. This is cosmic consciousness, the point where inner stillness and outer activity coexist rather than alternate. You can think, act, feel, and engage fully with life, while a quiet, unmoving awareness continues underneath all of it, untouched by the noise on the surface. Researchers describe this as sustained meta awareness, a steady activation of the brain’s monitoring systems that track internal and external experience at the same time. Philosophically, it marks the point where you stop mistaking your body, emotions, and personality for the whole of who you are. Emotions still arise, joy and grief included, but they move like waves across a much larger and calmer ocean underneath. Level Six: God Consciousness From here, the witnessing awareness that once observed the world from a slight distance begins to feel intimately woven into everything it perceives. The line between observer and observed softens. A tree stops being an object and starts feeling alive, vibrant, worth reverence. Neuroscience associates this shift with highly synchronized gamma activity, often observed during states of profound compassion or awe, where emotional and sensory processing begin to merge. But the deeper description is philosophical rather than mechanical: consciousness moves from simply witnessing the world to falling in love with it. Vedic tradition calls the resulting state sat chit ananda, being, consciousness, and bliss experienced as one. Christian mysticism speaks of union through love. Sufi poetry describes a divine passion that dissolves the sense of separateness altogether. Level Seven: Unity Consciousness At the final level, even the witness disappears. The boundary between self and world collapses entirely, and what remains is not a perspective on reality but reality itself, seamless and undivided. There is no longer an inside and an outside, only a single field of being that includes everything. Vedanta calls this the realization of Brahman, existence without a second. Mahayana Buddhism calls it sunyata, an emptiness that is somehow completely full. Time loses its grip here too, with past and future folding into a boundless present. This is not an escape from life but the recognition that consciousness was never divided from anything to begin with. One Awareness, Many Disguises Seen from a distance, these seven levels do not look like a staircase so much as a circle. We begin in the darkness of deep sleep, unaware of awareness itself, and end in a state so unified that even the sense of ascent disappears. Science measures the waves and frequencies along the way. Philosophy traces the same territory through language and metaphor. Both keep arriving at the same unspoken suggestion: consciousness is not something you possess. It is what you are. Perhaps the brain does not generate conscious

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  2. The Fourteen Year Countdown

    قبل ٥ أيام

    The Fourteen Year Countdown

    What if humanity’s biggest problem isn’t political or economic, but fragmentation? For most of history, communities shared the same stories and the same reality. Today people plug into different news feeds, different algorithms, different versions of truth. Two neighbors can inhabit entirely different realities simply by consuming different information. It is as if we have split into separate timelines, drifting away from what some call the singularity, a point where humanity either reunites through shared consciousness or fractures completely. A major European research facility, home to the Large Hadron Collider, began full operation in 2008. That same year a new U.S. president took office. During that presidency, on July 4th, 2012, scientists announced strong evidence for the Higgs boson, nicknamed the “God particle” because it gives matter physical substance. Months later, a law called the Smith Mundt Modernization Act loosened old restrictions on directing government messaging at domestic audiences, changing how information could legally reach the public, almost the same moment the particle of substance was confirmed. Fourteen years separate that July 4th from this one. Fourteen is not a random number in scripture. Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus is structured into three sets of fourteen generations, from Abraham to David, David to the exile, and the exile to Christ. Scholars often read fourteen as a symbol of completion, covenant, and the closing of one era before another begins. That same year, 2012, a Harvard religious historian revealed a fragmentary ancient papyrus in which Jesus is quoted referring to “my wife” before the text cuts off. It became known informally as the Gospel of Jesus’s Wife and sparked debate about marriage, discipleship, and hidden layers within scripture, the same year the particle of substance was confirmed and a media law reshaped the boundaries of public information. Singularity means unity, yet humanity looks more divided than ever. Some read the Book of Revelation not as destruction but disclosure, an unveiling of hidden truth. If that reading holds, what might be revealed fourteen years after 2012? Could it involve a hidden bloodline hinted at in fragments like the one from that year? Could new understanding of matter and reality itself emerge from the same kind of research that found the Higgs boson? And could whatever comes next be what pulls a fragmented humanity back toward a shared reality? None of this is certain. Coincidence and pattern can look identical from the inside, and humans are wired to find meaning in symmetry whether or not it was designed. Still, it is worth asking why these particular threads, a particle of substance, a change in media law, and a fragment questioning what we thought we knew about scripture, all surfaced within months of each other in a single year. The deeper question stands apart from any single date or number. What would it take to bring a fragmented world back to common ground, and is that even still possible in an age of personalized, algorithmically sorted truth. Perhaps an unveiling is coming. Perhaps the pattern is only coincidence. Either way, the pull between unity and fragmentation is not resolving itself, and each of us adds weight to one side of it with every piece of information we choose to trust. Don't forget to follow for more and check out my latest books in the link in bio! Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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  3. ٢٨ يونيو

    The Mask, the Shadow, and the Search for a Real Self

    The Mask, the Shadow, and the Search for a Real Self Why do so many of us feel quietly empty even when life looks fine on paper? In this episode, we dig into Carl Jung's ideas about the persona, the shadow, suffering, and individuation, and what they reveal about the gap between the life we perform and the life we're actually living. We talk about the mask we build for the world (the persona), the parts of ourselves we've buried because they felt unacceptable (the shadow), why pain often carries more meaning than we give it credit for, and what Jung meant when he called becoming yourself "the privilege of a lifetime." In this episode: Why modern life rewards performance over wholeness, and what that costs us psychologically The persona: the social mask we all wear, and the danger of mistaking it for who we really are How social media has turned identity into a 24/7 performance for an invisible audience The shadow: the rejected parts of ourselves that don't disappear, they just operate from the dark Projection: why the things that irritate us most about other people often point back at us Why suffering isn't just a malfunction to numb away, and what Jung meant by "neurosis is a substitute for legitimate suffering" Individuation: Jung's term for the lifelong work of becoming a more conscious, integrated person Practical entry points: solitude, watching your emotional triggers, honest journaling, and creative expression as ways back to yourself If this episode resonated, share it with someone who needs to hear it, and subscribe for more conversations on psychology, meaning, and the inner work most of us avoid. Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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  4. ١٩ يونيو

    The Universe Is Not Made of Things

    The Universe Is Not Made of Things What if the solid, stable, object-filled world you move through every day is not the foundation of reality but a simplified layer sitting on top of something far stranger? In this episode, we pull back the surface and examine what quantum entanglement actually reveals about the nature of existence, separation, and what it means to know anything at all. What We Cover We open with the assumption that quietly governs almost all of human thinking: that things exist independently and interact across space in predictable ways. That assumption formed the backbone of classical physics for centuries. Then quantum mechanics arrived and began dismantling it piece by piece. We walk through superposition, the genuinely unsettling discovery that particles do not settle into definite states before being observed. This is not ordinary uncertainty, like not knowing which side a coin landed on. The outcome does not exist until the measurement happens. Reality at the smallest scales is composed not of fixed things but of unresolved potential. From there we move into entanglement itself, what happens when two particles merge into a single shared system. When you measure one, its partner instantly takes the corresponding state, regardless of distance, with no signal traveling between them and no delay whatsoever. We break down why the glove analogy so commonly used to explain this actually misses the point entirely, and why Einstein's discomfort with what he called spooky action at a distance was a serious scientific objection, not a rhetorical one. We then cover Bell's theorem and what it actually proved. In 1964, physicist John Bell translated a philosophical debate into a concrete mathematical test. If hidden variables existed, correlations between entangled particles could only reach a certain strength. Quantum mechanics predicted those correlations would exceed that limit. Experiments confirmed the violation. Local hidden variables do not exist. The implications of that result are still being fully absorbed. We close by examining decoherence, the process by which quantum entanglement spreads so rapidly into the environment that it produces the appearance of a classical world. The solid, bounded, predictable reality we inhabit is not a separate layer from the quantum world. It emerges from it. Separation itself is emergent, not fundamental. The Deeper Thread What makes entanglement more than a physics curiosity is what it does to the idea of understanding itself. Human cognition is built around a specific strategy: break things down, isolate the parts, and let the pieces explain the whole. That strategy works at the scale of everyday life because at that scale, it is accurate. Classical systems are reducible. Entanglement reverses the logic entirely. In a fully entangled system, the whole contains information that the individual parts do not. You can know everything about the system and still know nothing definite about its components. No increase in precision changes this. It is not a measurement problem. It is a structural feature of reality. This is where the conversation moves beyond physics and into something closer to philosophy of mind. The brain evolved to handle a world where objects are large, interactions are local, and outcomes are stable. Quantum mechanics operates entirely outside that domain. The shortcuts that made human cognition efficient become liabilities when applied to this level of reality. Intuition does not just fall short here. It actively interferes. The shift this demands is not simply about accepting strange facts. It is about recognizing that certain forms of knowledge are inherently non-reducible, that some structures cannot be simplified without losing what makes them accurate, and that the expectation of a fully intuitive picture of reality may itself be the obstacle. Key Concepts From This Episode Superposition: the condition in which a quantum particle exists as a range of possible states simultaneously before measurement. Quantum entanglement: the phenomenon in which two particles form a single shared system such that measuring one instantly determines the state of the other regardless of distance. Local realism: the classical assumption that objects have definite properties independent of observation and that influences between objects travel through space over time. Bell's inequality: a mathematical limit on the strength of correlations that any local hidden variable theory can produce, violated repeatedly in experiment. Decoherence: the process by which quantum systems become entangled with their environments at a scale that makes quantum effects unobservable, giving rise to classical behavior. Non-locality: the property of quantum systems in which distant components behave as parts of a single unified system rather than as independent objects exchanging signals. A Line Worth Sitting With The problem was never that reality is broken. The problem is that the model we inherited was never built to describe it at this level. If this episode opened something up for you, share it with someone. New episodes drop regularly on all major platforms. Subscribe on Substack! Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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  5. ١٥ يونيو

    The Seven Levels of Reality

    The Seven Levels of Reality Reality doesn't make any sense. And most people never stop long enough to notice. In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the nature of existence itself, moving through seven distinct levels of reality that range from the world you wake up in every morning all the way down to something so deep that language itself breaks apart trying to describe it. We start at the surface, the consensus reality most of us never question, where tables are solid, objects stay put, and everything feels stable. Then we descend into the realm of perception, where your brain turns raw chaos into a reconstruction it calls the world. From there we move into belief, where money, borders, and morality reveal themselves as collective agreements holding more power than most physical forces ever could. Then things get strange. Science dismantles matter, bends time, and reveals a quantum layer where particles refuse to commit to a position until someone is watching. Below that sits the simulation question, the unsettling possibility that there is no base reality at all and that everything you experience is a rendered interface running on something else entirely. Deeper still, mystics and meditators across thousands of years of human history have pointed to a level where the self dissolves and something vast and undivided remains. And at the very bottom, we reach the place where all models collapse, all language fails, and the only honest response is silence. This episode will shift the way you think about everything you think you know. Subscribe, leave a review, and share this one with someone who is ready to question everything. Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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  6. ٦ يونيو

    The Hidden Code Running Your Life

    The Hidden Code Running Your Life: 12 Laws of the Universe What if the universe has always been trying to communicate with you and you just didn't know the language? In this episode, we break down the 12 Laws of the Universe: the invisible architecture that governs everything from the movement of stars to the quality of your daily experience. These are not modern inventions. The Hermetic philosophers of ancient Egypt, the Vedic sages of India, and the Tao masters of China all mapped these same principles thousands of years apart. That kind of convergence is worth paying attention to. We walk through all twelve laws one by one, unpacking what each one actually means and how it shows up in real life -- because understanding these principles on paper is one thing. Recognizing them in your relationships, your finances, your emotional patterns, and your creative blocks is where the real shift begins. What we cover in this episode: The Law of Divine Oneness and why everything you do to others you are simultaneously doing to yourself The Law of Vibration and how your emotional state functions as a literal frequency broadcasting into the field around you The Law of Correspondence and the Hermetic axiom "as above, so below" -- and what it means for your inner work The Law of Attraction reframed beyond pop culture: why it is physics, not wishful thinking The Law of Inspired Action and the difference between anxious hustle and aligned movement The Law of Perpetual Transmutation of Energy and why no state you are in right now is permanent The Law of Cause and Effect and the long chain of consequences that most people never trace back to their origin The Law of Compensation and how genuine contribution creates an invisible field of return The Law of Relativity and the power of context to completely reframe what you think is impossible The Law of Polarity and why your greatest resistance often points directly to your greatest growth The Law of Rhythm and how to stop fighting the natural contraction phases of life The Law of Gender and the two creative principles that must be integrated for real wholeness to emerge The deeper thread: These twelve laws are not twelve separate things. They are twelve angles on one truth: that the universe is ordered, responsive, and intelligent. Once you begin to see reality through that lens, you stop feeling like life is happening to you and start recognizing that life is happening through you. That shift in perception is not philosophical. It is practical. It changes how you respond to setbacks, how you invest your energy, what you choose to focus on, and what you stop wasting yourself on. If this episode resonated with you: Share it with someone who is in a season of questioning. These laws have a way of landing at exactly the right moment for people who are ready to receive them. Subscribe to the Atlas Relics Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com for the full written breakdown of all 12 laws, plus deeper dives into consciousness, ancient wisdom, and the science of personal transformation. The universe is not indifferent. It is precise. And the more clearly you understand the rules of the system you inhabit, the more freely and powerfully you can move within it. Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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  7. ٢٩ مايو

    The Ancient Tremor Your Body Has Been Trying to Complete

    write a podcast show notes for a episode of that 7:23 PM Claude responded: The Ancient Tremor Your Body Has Been Trying to Complete The Ancient Tremor Your Body Has Been Trying to Complete Most stress advice lives in the mind. Breathe slower. Think differently. Reframe the narrative. But what if the solution was never cognitive? What if it was always physical, and the culture that taught you composure was the very thing keeping your nervous system stuck in alarm? In this episode we go deep into the biology of stress discharge, what actually happens inside your body when adrenaline enters your bloodstream, why forcing stillness keeps the alarm running long after the threat is gone, and why a sixty-second movement practice your brainstem already knows how to run might be the most underused recovery tool available to you. We look at what trauma researchers noticed when studying wild animals in the field, specifically the pattern that appears consistently across every mammal species after a high-stakes survival event, and what it reveals about a mechanism humans carry but rarely allow to complete. We trace the signal from your mechanoreceptors through the dorsal horn of your spinal cord, through the psoas, through the vagus nerve, all the way to the reticular activating system in your brainstem, the threat radar that cannot be reasoned with but can be reset in under a minute through movement alone. We also get into why sleep suffers when the body carries undischarged stress, why a racing mind at bedtime is a symptom rather than the cause, and what it means that the most primitive part of your survival brain reads posture and movement as its primary evidence for whether you are safe. No supplements. No technique that takes weeks to learn. Just the biology of what your body has been trying to do every time you told it to hold still. What we cover: Gate control theory and why mechanical input physically crowds out stress signals at the spinal level The gazelle pattern and what it reveals about how wild mammals complete a stress response without accumulating trauma Adrenaline as a fuel molecule and what happens when it never gets metabolized The psoas as the body's deepest stress-holding structure and how tremor reaches it The vagus nerve, heart rate variability, and the speed of a bottom-up nervous system reset Why most sleep problems are body problems before they are mind problems The sixty-second protocol and how to run it. If this episode resonated: Share it with someone who is told to just calm down and never quite manages to. The mechanism we talk about today is in every body. Most people just need permission to use it. Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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  8. ٢٧ مايو

    The Animals Who Never Leave

    What the Animals Know: Building Your Personal Spirit Animal Council If you have ever felt drawn to a specific animal since childhood, seen the same creature appear in your dreams across years, or noticed an animal showing up repeatedly during a hard season of your life, this episode is going to reframe everything you thought that meant. In this episode we go deep into the practice of building a personal spirit animal council, not as a symbolic exercise, but as a living spiritual relationship rooted in some of the oldest traditions on earth. What we cover in this episode: The difference between knowing about spirit animals and actually working with them, and why that gap only closes through relationship, not research. How the Lakota Sioux, Celtic tradition, and shamanic cultures from Siberia to the Amazon all understood animal guides as ongoing bonds that required tending over a lifetime, not one-time summonings. The two types of spirit animals you carry: your core lifelong guides who feel like the weather of your inner life, and the messenger animals who arrive during threshold moments with specific teachings for specific seasons. Why your core spirit animal is chosen based on soul compatibility rather than prestige, and what it means when the animal that shows up is the one you least expected. The four foundational practices that build a real working relationship with your council: meditation, altar-building, card pulls, and nature walks. How to create a morning invocation and evening reflection practice that anchors your animal council into daily life rather than keeping it as an occasional spiritual exercise. Seasonal ceremonies aligned to the solstices and equinoxes, and the specific animal medicines that correspond to each turning point in the year. Why a spirit animal journal becomes, over years, one of the most irreplaceable records of your own spiritual life. Key insight from this episode: Most people come to spirit animal work looking for information. What actually transforms the practice is learning to tend it the way you tend any relationship that matters. With consistency, with presence, with honesty. Your council does not need you to be perfect. It needs you to show up. Get full access to Atlas's Substack at atlasrelics95.substack.com/subscribe

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Practical wisdom for spiritual awakening and inner transformation. atlasrelics95.substack.com