Sometimes things fall apart — a relationship ends, our work becomes unbearable, or the entire fabric of our life starts to feel unfulfilling.
What once made sense suddenly doesn’t.
At such a turning point, something deeper is happening: a part of our ego is dying.
And although it feels like everything is collapsing, it is actually the beginning of something new.
If we can accept it — if we refrain from trying to fix the situation, from resorting to further destructive behaviours — then we begin to feel the sadness in the heart.
We may be in it for a few days or weeks, and then something shifts. It feels as if a new birth is happening.
Our perception, our thoughts, our feelings — all begin to lighten.
We start to see everything, within and around us, without the heaviness that was there before.
We begin to see the same life, but with new eyes.
What once made us angry now stirs compassion.
What used to weigh us down barely touches us.
There is a sense of freshness in our experience — as if the old has quietly fallen away.
It is still there, but more like a memory.
Like a movie we can now watch, rather than something we are caught inside of.
This is how transformation feels. Not dramatic. Not mystical. Just real, human, and very much alive.
And yet, transformation is not a one-time event. Other parts of the ego will surface, and the process begins again.
But now, we know the key:
- to let go when self-destruction comes knocking.
- to stay with ourselves.
- to allow the process to unfold.
This is the kind of inner transformation that Tibetan Pulsing makes possible — working directly with the nervous system through the body’s bio-electrical pulse, allowing old charges to dissolve and a new quality of perception to emerge naturally.
