April 3

Time Is The Great Illusion

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John Kabashinski

“The distinction between the past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion.”

Albert Einstein

Time Defines Us

Time is the glue that holds us in illusion. Our life, or our consciousness of a single life in a body, is measured in time. We believe that we begin and end in this life, without a memory of before or much concern for after. But reality is that we are immortal and exist beyond this life and before it as well.


This temporal consciousness is also the basis for our belief in fear and security. We begin to believe in our life as finite as we also do in our separateness from our Creative Source. As we watch the sun and moon, rise and fall, and the seasons come and go, we see life in the physical natural world beginning and ending in a consumptive struggle for survival. We believe we are born and die and in anticipation count moments in between.

Time Defines Fear 


As we suffer with hunger and through hardship, we count time as it passes until our rescue or demise. The sun and moon and seasons are reliable benchmarks for the duration of our experience of suffering. So we begin in our separateness to make them the basis for our new false reality. While the rhythms of life and death are measured as time, when we meditate time disappears and seems to contract. It passes by quickly when we are consumed with our consciousness focused on the present. But our sadness from our past and worry of the future is born in the illusion of time. As we believe in time, we begin to hold on to our negative emotions. Suffering is paramount in our beliefs as our primary focus.


Our painful experiences give birth to our fears because time holds our reality. We believe as time passes we may repeat this painful experience, so we hold it in our consciousness and then compare each new experience to it. If it is vaguely similar we respond in our body and mind. So our temporal consciousness allows for our fear cycling mind.

We Desire More Time

Time is also the basis for our desires. If we count the time of our suffering it expands. Time seems endless when we are gripped in fear. It is as if one night of suffering will never end, while at peace and bliss pass by effortlessly. We then believe in scarcity. When we don’t obtain things we need for survival in a timely fashion, we begin to anticipate our future suffering. We hoard and compete with others to obtain our needs. Here our separateness solidifies in our consciousness. We no longer are aware of our needs being constantly met by our creative Source but as a result of our ab ility to manipulate and control others and our environment. We give our individual will away to the collective.


As we focus more on this ability to obtain and control we begin to associate happiness and peace with satisfying what we want. As a co-creator of our world, we value it only for how it serves us. We rationalize any and all negative behaviors to make this real. Our separateness now extends past our Creative Source and includes all others.

Time Is An Illusion We Value

Our false reality is cemented together with time. Our values goals and roles are seen only through this viewpoint and keeps driving our fear, suffering and unfulfilled desires. How we focus our consciousness becomes the dictate of the time over will.


We work to eat. We only eat as well as our work is valued by others. Time then gives birth to another illusion money. We receive paper or metal for our labor. We begin to believe our worth is about how much of this we accumulate. We believe having more will provide us happiness. Our lives march by and we are slaves to this illusion, which is only real because it is widely held and we believe it.


We then begin to value time. Time is money. We neglect our relationships and push down our emotions to best spend our time. We set goals and then reassure them with time. Pursuits that do not increase our value of time and money become worthless. Our life becomes obsessed with the efficient use of time in order to raise its value. We stop making time for each other. Science and technology amplifies this temporal consciousness. Each new innovation amazes us with its compression of time. Tasks that previously took months, become hours, and days become minutes. The labor of many becomes the job of a few. But this worship of time does not create more of it.

Time Runs Us

On the contrary, as we continuously master time we are mastered by it. We no longer have meaningful communications but lots of it. We become preoccupied with email, cell phones and other technological tethers to our consciousness. We thing we are mastering our time. We spend little time in actual constructive labor and much of it in managing how it is spent.


But how much time do we spend with our Creative Source each day? It becomes increasingly harder in a modern world to find that time. How much time do we spend revisiting our questions, reexamining what we believe, value and our purpose for being. How much time do we spend working on our key relationships or even valuing our self? The illusion of time begins to claim our life, not just define it. We must break free of our temporal consciousness by reconnecting to the Everlasting Truth.


Then we being to see time as just an illusion held together by fear. We remain in a world measured by time and valued by money, but this world begins to leave us. We start to see a greater reality that is timeless. By seeing it we grow closer to it. 

About the author

John Kabashinski is a spiritual seeker trying to know God and serve others who are spiritual but not religious as an author, teacher, and healer. His goal is to help people awaken to a real relationship with God and the transformation that it brings.


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