The Great I AM

The Great I AM Cannot Be Uttered by the Chattering Tongue

The essence of “I AM” defies articulation. Language, though beautiful, often becomes a noisy river of concepts, attempting to capture something that simply cannot be grasped. The chattering tongue thrives on duality, building walls between subject and object, speaker and listener, self and other. Yet, the Great I AM stands outside this dualistic framework, unbounded, whole, and utterly silent.

“I AM” is not a statement. It is the root of being itself, preceding thought, identity, and all constructs of the mind. To utter it is to already veil its truth. Words can point to the presence of the I AM, but they are shadows trying to explain the light. The moment you speak, it slips through the cracks of description, retreating into the stillness from which it arises.

Why, then, does the tongue chatter? It chatters because it fears the void—the stillness where the mind dissolves, and the self is no more. The ego’s survival depends on noise, distraction, and the endless creation of stories. In silence, it falters, confronted by the stark and undeniable simplicity of being.

To encounter the Great I AM is not to think about it but to dissolve into it. It is to rest in the awareness that observes the thoughts, the feelings, the words, and even the idea of “I.” This awareness has no form, no beginning or end. It is neither here nor there, neither this nor that. It is simply what is—timeless, spaceless, and unchanging.

When the tongue is still, the mind quiets, and the veil of separation thins. There, in that profound stillness, lies the Great I AM. It cannot be possessed, named, or claimed. It is the ground of all existence and yet entirely untouched by it. It is not yours or mine, yet it is undeniably the essence of what we are.

To live in the awareness of the Great I AM is to recognize that all the noise, all the chatter, is simply a dance of form arising within the formless. It is to see that even the ego, with all its stories, is just a fleeting ripple in the infinite ocean of being.

Silence does not mean the absence of sound; it means the absence of resistance. It is the acceptance of all that is, without judgment or clinging. In this silence, the Great I AM reveals itself—not as a word, a concept, or a thought, but as the ever-present reality of existence itself.

The chattering tongue will never grasp this truth, but the silent heart already knows.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

The Face of the Observing Self

What does it mean to observe oneself? To truly look inward is to confront the observer and the observed paradox. Self-observation reveals something both unsettling and liberating: the absence of a concrete “self” to observe. Yet, this absence is not a void; it is a vast, dynamic awareness that holds all experience without judgment or attachment.

When the mind turns its gaze inward, it seeks to grasp the essence of identity. Who is the one observing? Is it the body, the thoughts, or the emotions? As the layers of identity dissolve under scrutiny, the “face” of the observing self becomes clear: it has no features, no boundaries, no name. It is an awareness that exists beyond the stories we tell ourselves, beyond the constructs of past and future.

This realization often stirs resistance. The mind, conditioned to identify with roles and narratives, may fight to hold onto the illusion of a solid self. But the observing self invites surrender—not as a defeat but as a return to authenticity. To analyze its face is not to define it but to recognize that it is the source of all definitions, all perceptions, and all experiences.

In this space of pure observation, there is no judgment. Thoughts arise and fall away like waves; emotions flow without resistance. The observer does not interfere, label, or categorize. It is simply present, awake, and unattached. This is where true freedom lies—not in controlling the waves of experience but in abiding by the unmoving awareness beneath them.

The practice of observing oneself is not an escape from life but a profound engagement with it. It is the realization that the one who suffers, the one who desires, and the one who fears is not the ultimate truth of who we are. Beyond these transient identities lies the still, eternal witness, untouched by the flux of existence.

To analyze the face of the observing self is to encounter the formless essence of being. It is a mirror reflecting the infinite, a gateway to profound peace. This realization transforms how we engage with the world, fostering a deep compassion for ourselves and others. For when the illusion of separation falls away, what remains is love—the recognition that the observer and the observed are one.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

A Mind Fully Expressed

The human brain holds untapped dimensions of potential, yet most individuals navigate life using only fragments of its capability. This limitation is not due to biology but to patterns of thinking and perception shaped by societal conditioning, habitual behaviours, and resistance to change. The question arises: What does it mean to fully activate the brain? And how can this lead to a fully expressed mind?

A fully activated brain does not signify busyness or overstimulation. Instead, it represents a harmonious integration of logic, creativity, intuition, and awareness. When these dimensions align, the mind ceases to operate in fragmented dualities—right versus wrong, success versus failure—and begins to function as an instrument of boundless expression.

Achieving this state requires more than intellectual stimulation or the accumulation of knowledge. Practices such as meditation, neuroplastic exercises, and deep creative play open pathways to dormant brain regions. These practices cultivate a unified consciousness where clarity replaces confusion, and insight transcends limitation.

Activation begins by challenging the mind’s default settings. Unlearn the need for control, question the narratives you’ve inherited, and observe the interplay between thought and emotion without attachment. By dissolving mental rigidity, space emerges for new possibilities to take root.

A fully expressed mind doesn’t simply solve problems; it creates realities. When the brain functions as an integrated whole, life transforms into a canvas for profound exploration, innovation, and growth. Every action, from the simplest interaction to the grandest creation, becomes a reflection of an awakened state of being.

This level of brain activation is not reserved for the mystics, the prodigies, or the geniuses. It is the birthright of every human being willing to dismantle the barriers within and embrace the unknown. The fully expressed mind is a testament to the infinite nature of consciousness, a reminder that the boundaries we perceive are self-imposed illusions.

Are you ready to unlock this potential? The journey requires courage, but the reward is a life that radiates authenticity, creativity, and boundless freedom.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

The Perfect Gift Wrapped in Mind

The body is often seen as a vessel, a biological mechanism enabling experience and action. But what if we approached it differently? What if we recognized the body as the ultimate gift—intricately wrapped in layers of mind, emotion, and perception? This perspective shifts us from treating the body as a passive object to understanding it as an intelligent instrument of the infinite.

Each sensation the body offers is a doorway. The ache in your shoulders, the flutter in your stomach, the breath moving through your chest—these aren’t merely physiological events. They are signals, invitations to become aware of the mind’s imprints and the silent intelligence that animates them. The body reveals the unseen layers of the mind, not to entangle us but to set us free.

Consider the interplay of movement and stillness. A heartbeat pulses within every moment of quietude, a reminder that even in perceived rest, life hums with activity. Similarly, the mind often overlays the body’s simplicity with stories—self-judgment, desires, and fears. Yet, beneath this mental wrapping lies pure awareness, unclouded and ever-present.

True liberation doesn’t come from rejecting the body or attempting to transcend it but from embracing its divine design. The body is where the formless meets form, where consciousness expresses itself in tangible, palpable ways. When we cease resisting its messages and begin listening with curiosity, the body transforms from an object of control into a teacher of profound wisdom.

This realization is not merely theoretical. It can be felt. Try sitting quietly and attuning to the subtleties of your breath. Notice the places where tension resides, where the body’s natural rhythms feel interrupted. With gentle attention, ask: “What is this teaching me?” Often, the mind will resist—habitually seeking distraction or interpretation. But as you remain present, something deeper emerges: an understanding that the body and mind are not separate, but two facets of the same infinite presence.

Awakening is not about leaving the body behind but about fully inhabiting it. By appreciating its perfect gift and unwrapping the layers of mind that obscure it, we find ourselves drawn closer to our true nature.

The next time you feel pain, joy, or anything in between, pause. Let the body be your guide, not just a vehicle for experience but the very expression of life’s sacred mystery.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

Heaven and Brimstone

Seeing Beauty Where None Is Expected

To see burning brimstone as beautiful gems is not a naive optimism but a profound reorientation of perception. The alchemy of consciousness transforms what is often labelled as suffering or undesirable into something sacred, even divine. The journey to this realization does not lie in escaping difficulties but fully meeting them, unguarded and undefended.

Most spend their lives seeking an idealized heaven, a utopia where pain, conflict, and discomfort are absent. Yet, what if the true heaven is not a destination but a shift in how reality is experienced? What if heaven emerges not when circumstances change, but when the mind stops resisting the circumstances it once fled?

Burning brimstone evokes images of torment, the archetypal inferno of spiritual suffering. Yet, fire has always been dual. It consumes, but it also purifies. It destroys, yet it forges. The very flames that sear can illuminate. To see gems within the fire is to recognize the transformative power hidden in every difficulty, every discomfort, every perceived flaw.

This is the paradox of awakening: the world remains the same, yet nothing is the same. The raw intensity of existence, with all its chaos and unpredictability, becomes a source of wonder. Heaven, then, is not an escape but an embrace. It is not found elsewhere but revealed here, in the present, when we are willing to see clearly.

How Do We Begin?

Drop the Narrative: Pain and suffering often intensify because of the stories we weave around them. Without the narrative, fire is just fire. Burnt bridges are just opportunities for new paths. The mind’s interpretation makes them unbearable.

Engage Curiosity: Rather than judging experiences, approach them with curiosity. What is this discomfort teaching? What lies beneath the surface? Gems rarely rest in plain sight; they are unearthed through inquiry.

Surrender Control: Heaven is realized not by controlling life but by allowing life to be what it is. This surrender is not weakness; it is the strength to flow with life rather than against it.

Through these practices, what once seemed like burning brimstone—the unbearable weight of human suffering—may transform into beautiful gems. This is not a denial of the challenges but a recognition that all of existence, even the painful parts, is imbued with beauty and meaning when approached with the eyes of wisdom.

The question is not whether heaven exists but whether you are willing to see it, even amid flames.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

The Soul’s Infinite Expression

We tend to anchor our identity in the physical body, perceiving it as the centre of our existence. From birth, the body is celebrated, measured, and scrutinized, reinforcing the illusion that it defines who we are. This fixation on the body as the ultimate reality obscures a deeper truth: the physical form is merely one facet of an expansive, multidimensional soul.

Your soul expresses itself across layers of existence, many of which are beyond ordinary perception. The body serves as a temporary vessel, a focal point through which the infinite interacts with the finite. While it appears solid and tangible, the body is a fleeting projection of the soul’s boundless energy, a transient ripple in the vast ocean of your being.

The Illusion of Exclusivity

Viewing the body as the entirety of selfhood limits understanding of existence. The physical realm, with its sensory experiences, feels undeniably real. Yet, when closely examined, the body is revealed to be impermanent, constantly changing, and inseparable from the environment around it. The cells within it are born and die in a perpetual cycle, mirroring the patterns of nature. Nothing about the body is fixed—except the awareness of witnessing its fluctuations.

This awareness belongs not to the body but to the soul. The soul uses the physical form to engage with this dimension of reality, much like light passing through a prism creates a spectrum of colours. The body is one colour, but the spectrum of the soul contains infinite hues.

The Multidimensional Self

Beyond the physical, there are layers of existence where your soul expresses itself. Subtle energy fields, emotional resonances, and realms of thought and intention all flow from the same source. These facets interact with the body, shaping experiences in ways often unnoticed. A sudden intuition, a deep emotional release, or a spontaneous surge of creativity are glimpses of the soul’s reach beyond the material.

The soul is not confined by linear time or space. The body moves through time, aging and decaying, while the soul exists in a timeless state, simultaneously influencing and being influenced by multiple dimensions of reality. To recognize this is to understand that your physical form is not the limit of your being, but a doorway into the infinite.

Why the Physical Body Matters

Acknowledging the body as one facet of the soul does not diminish its importance. The physical form is the ground where spiritual experiences take shape, where the formless soul engages directly with the tangible world. Every breath, movement, and sensation is an opportunity to express the soul’s essence in a way no other dimension allows.

Honouring the body as an extension of the soul transforms the way you relate to it. Instead of obsessing over appearances or fearing its eventual decline, you begin to see the body as sacred—a fleeting but essential aspect of your journey. Caring for it becomes an act of devotion, not out of attachment, but a way to honour the soul’s choice to experience this dimension.

Living Beyond the Body’s Facade

Recognizing that the physical body is only one aspect of the self brings profound liberation. Fear of death diminishes because the soul’s existence does not hinge on the body’s survival. Identity expands beyond the physical, allowing you to live with a sense of wholeness and interconnection.

When you stop identifying solely with the body, relationships transform. You no longer see others as separate entities defined by their forms. Instead, you recognize the shared essence flowing through every individual, a unified soul expressing itself in infinite ways. This awareness fosters deep compassion and an intuitive understanding of the interconnectedness of all life.

Your physical body is not a prison or limitation; it is a reflection of your soul’s creative power. To live fully means to embrace this perspective, allowing the soul to shine through every aspect of your existence, both seen and unseen.

 Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

Exciting Updates: Podcasts, Articles & More!

Hello Friends,

I’m thrilled to share some exciting updates about the work I’ve been doing and the new insights I’ve been exploring. From podcasts to articles and more, here’s what’s new in my world of meditation, neuroscience, and personal transformation.

Diving Into the Mind on Guru Viking Podcast

I recently had the pleasure of joining Steve James on the Guru Viking Podcast for another enlightening discussion. This time, I was joined by Alex Ni of Divergence Neuro Technologies and Columbia University neuroscience student Chelsey Fasano to explore the fascinating world of my unique brainwave patterns.

These brainwaves, cultivated over two decades of dedicated meditation, offer profound insights into how the mind and meditation can intersect with neuroscience and personal growth.

Stay tuned for the full episode, but you can see some of my results here:
Exploring the Mind of an Advanced Meditator Pt. 2.

Check out Guru Viking every Friday on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, and Spotify!

My Story Featured in Usainstants & Brainz Magazine

I’m honored to have my journey featured in Usainstants, where you can read about my transformation from awakening to creating the Yinnergy program. This story highlights how meditation has reshaped my life and the lives of many others. Read the full article here: Morgan’s Transformative Journey.

Additionally, as an Executive Contributor to Brainz Magazine, I’ve been sharing my perspectives on mindfulness, spirituality, and transformation. You can explore my latest articles here: Brainz Magazine.

Stay Tuned for More

I’m so grateful to be able to share my journey with you through these platforms. From podcasts to articles, each step is another opportunity to explore the limitless possibilities of the human mind and spirit.

Thank you for being a part of this journey. Together, let’s continue to unlock the extraordinary potential within us all.

With gratitude and excitement,

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

Nothing Exists

The Witness Alone Remains

Every belief we hold about reality begins with a fundamental assumption: that something exists. Objects, thoughts, emotions, and even the concept of the self are taken as undeniable truths. But when we look closer, reality reveals itself to be far less solid. Strip away perceptions, dismantle the narratives, and what remains? Nothing. Not the nothing of absence, but a profound, living nothingness that holds the potential for everything.

The paradox lies here: if nothing truly exists, then what is aware of this nothing? What observes the rise and fall of sensations, thoughts, and forms? The answer is the witness—pure awareness, untouched by the shifting currents of existence. It is not an object that can be grasped, but the context in which all objects appear.

What Is the Witness?

The witness is not the thinking mind or the personality you’ve constructed through years of conditioning. It is that which observes even the mind itself. The witness is silent, still, and ever-present. It is not bound by time, nor does it possess a location. While the body and thoughts belong to the world of form, the witness transcends it entirely.

When you recognize the witness, the illusion of existence begins to unravel. The objects of your awareness—whether external events or internal thoughts—are revealed to be fleeting, momentary phenomena. They appear, they shift, and they dissolve, leaving no trace of permanence. The witness alone remains unchanged, untouched by the dance of creation and destruction.

Nothingness as Freedom

The recognition that nothing exists liberates you from attachment. If everything is transient, then clinging to any experience, belief, or identity is an exercise in futility. This does not mean rejecting the world but meeting it with openness, seeing it for what it is: a play of appearances arising within the vastness of nothingness.

This nothingness is not cold or lifeless. It is the fertile void from which all existence springs, a source of infinite creativity and potential. The witness watches the unfolding of this creative process, yet remains uninvolved, free from entanglement.

Who Experiences Existence?

The ultimate question arises: if nothing exists, how can existence be experienced at all? The witness is both the perceiver and the essence of existence itself. It is through the act of witnessing that “existence” takes on meaning. Without the witness, there is no one to perceive existence. The world, as we know it, cannot exist independently of the awareness observing it.

This insight has profound implications. The separation between the experiencer and the experienced dissolves. Reality is no longer something “out there” to be analyzed or controlled; it is a dynamic flow that arises within you, as you. The witness is not apart from existence—it is existence, recognizing itself through the illusion of separation.

Living as the Witness

To live as the witness does not mean rejecting the world or detaching from life. It means fully engaging with reality while knowing its true nature. You move through life with clarity, seeing that every thought, every sensation, and every moment arises from nothing and returns to nothing. The recognition of this emptiness brings freedom—not a withdrawal from life, but a deeper immersion in its sacredness.

When the witness becomes your anchor, suffering loses its grip. Challenges and emotions no longer define you; they are simply waves in the ocean of awareness. Relationships deepen, as you no longer seek validation or fulfillment from others. The peace of the witness is enough.

This realization is not a conclusion but an ongoing experience. Every moment offers an opportunity to rest in the witness, to see through the illusions of existence, and to marvel at the profound simplicity of being.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

The Self You’ve Disowned

We often approach the idea of God as something external—an omniscient force watching from a distance, a transcendent creator who governs the cosmos. Yet this perspective keeps us trapped in separation, perpetually seeking something outside ourselves to fill a void or grant us salvation. What if the very concept of God points to an aspect of our being, an ultimate reflection of the self we’ve denied?

This disowned self isn’t the egoic identity that clings to its limitations. We have forgotten how to access the essence of boundless awareness, a space of infinite potential and wisdom. To disown something is to exile it from consciousness. And what has been exiled? The unconditioned self is the aspect of us that sees through the illusions of individuality and recognizes its oneness with all existence.

When we strip away the layers of attachment, fear, and identification with form, what remains? The answer is not a void in the nihilistic sense but a fertile emptiness where the fullness of life reveals itself. This is the realm where the divine resides, not as a being separate from you, but as the highest level of yourself—a self too vast, too luminous, to fit into the confines of your limited perception.

The Psychology of Disowning God

Many disown this ultimate self because embracing it requires the dissolution of the ego. We cling to roles, stories, and identities because they provide a sense of control. Yet these constructs are fragile, built on the shifting sands of impermanence. To own the highest self—the God-self—is to release the need for control, to step into the unknown with trust.

This is why the concept of God can evoke discomfort or skepticism. It forces us to confront the parts of ourselves that resist unity. The fragmented mind would rather see divinity as “out there” than face the profound responsibility of embodying it. To own the God-self is to accept that you are both the creator and the created, the ocean and the wave.

Reclaiming the Disowned Self

Reclaiming this aspect of the self is not about achieving something new. It is about remembering. This remembering begins with stillness—a radical turning inward that allows you to see the divine as the very ground of your being. It is the quiet realization that you are not a seeker in search of God; you are God, awakening to itself.

This journey requires profound courage. To reclaim the self you’ve disowned is to face the shadows you’ve avoided, to embrace the paradoxes of existence. It is to see that what you once called “God” and what you once called “self” are not separate, but one.

This realization does not inflate the ego. On the contrary, it dissolves it. When you live from the awareness of the highest self, every action becomes an expression of divine will. Compassion flows naturally because you recognize every being as another facet of the same essence. Suffering transforms into a teacher, guiding you back to wholeness.

Living from the God-Self

To live from this understanding is to inhabit life with clarity and grace. Challenges no longer feel like punishments but invitations to deepen your alignment with the divine within. Relationships are no longer transactional but become mirrors reflecting the infinite back to you. Every moment becomes sacred—not because of what it contains, but because of who you are as you experience it.

This is the ultimate paradox: God is not something you find; it is something you become by realizing you were never anything else.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith

The Neutrality of Being

Beyond Preference and Bias

Human experience revolves around preferences—good versus bad, desirable versus undesirable. From a young age, we are conditioned to label moments, objects, and relationships based on our likes or dislikes, shaping a world of duality. Yet, something remarkable may begin to unfold for those who experience a profound spiritual awakening. The intensity of preferences softens, and the once-compelling narratives around right and wrong, beautiful and ugly, start to lose their grip.

This shift isn’t forced or rehearsed; it arises organically as consciousness deepens. It’s not about suppressing preferences or pretending they don’t exist. Rather, it’s about witnessing them without attachment. You might still notice that one meal tastes better than another, or that one kind of weather feels more comfortable, but the emotional charge—the bias for or against—diminishes.

This state of neutrality doesn’t negate the ability to express feelings about situations or objects. Joy, sadness, appreciation, or aversion may still arise naturally. However, the inner dialogue changes. An object once deemed essential for happiness may now appear as just an object. A situation that would have previously elicited anger or frustration may no longer hold the same power.

Neutrality is not numbness or indifference; it is the ultimate expression of freedom. When bias fades, life’s experiences are not judged as lacking or sufficient—they simply are. This perspective offers a profound sense of peace. When preferences no longer dominate the mind, the heart is free to engage with reality exactly as it unfolds.

This state isn’t something that needs to be chased or consciously cultivated. It arises as a natural byproduct of deep inner awakening. The realization that all phenomena are transient allows one to meet life with equanimity. Dualities are not eradicated but are seen for what they are—part of the play of existence, neither to be clung to nor rejected.

If you’re on the path of spiritual exploration, allow yourself to relax into the flow of awareness. Don’t try to force neutrality; simply observe the moments when it arises. Over time, you may notice that this spacious, bias-free perspective becomes less of an exception and more of your default state of being.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation, Spiritual Life Coaching & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith