Linear Time Humanity s Oldest and Greatest Decepti

Linear Time — Humanity’s Oldest and Greatest Deception

From childhood, we are taught to believe that there is a past, a present, and a future. We are told that events unfold along a straight line and that time can never be reversed.

But what if linear time is merely a mode of perception, necessary only for experiencing reality here?

Many ancient traditions described time as a cycle, a spiral, or an eternal return. All events exist simultaneously, while consciousness simply shifts its focus from one point to another, creating the illusion of movement from the past toward the future. Our past has not disappeared, and our future has not yet come into being. Everything already exists within a single, unified field of time.

Once we move beyond the limits of ordinary human perception—limits embedded within the local control mechanisms of the Solar System—we may discover that time has never actually flowed forward. It has always been cyclical, while the boundaries between past, present, and future existed only within our particular way of perceiving reality.

Sometimes the strongest structures are also the least noticeable.

Time is the first of them.

If the entire population of the planet were to recognize this illusion simultaneously, the system itself would collapse, and the linear vector of time would disintegrate. For now, only a few become aware of it. Each awakening weakens the structure, creating fractures within it, yet the system continues to endure.

The illusion of linear time is sustained by collective human beliefs passed from generation to generation, reinforced through historical milestones, calendars, holidays, and recurring events that define the passage of time—for example, “Another year has gone by.”

Society’s age-related milestones strengthen the illusion just as effectively: childhood, adolescence, youth, adulthood, and old age.

By mentally participating in this narrative, each individual unconsciously programs themselves according to predetermined stages of time. From this arise deeply rooted beliefs that at a certain age it becomes “too late” to begin something new.

If we strip away all artificially imposed meanings and simply observe reality itself, we may discover that only the eternal Now truly exists.

Had the architects of our civilization allowed humanity to perceive cyclical time directly, every stage of existence—beginning, development, culmination, and completion—would unfold simultaneously rather than sequentially.

The human mind finds this concept difficult to grasp until it steps beyond the boundaries of the system and views the entire structure from a higher perspective.

That is why I have repeatedly written throughout my articles: do not become overly attached to socially accepted dates, anniversaries, celebrations, or the countless symbolic markers that people consider important.

Consider why those who hold power place such importance on millions of people celebrating the same occasions on the same dates, repeating the same words of congratulations at precisely the same moment.

Each synchronized act establishes another marker upon an artificial timeline, reinforcing it as an imposed construct—powered by the very energy of those who unknowingly participate in it.

How can one stop being merely another cog in this centuries-old system of deception?

As long as we exist here, we inevitably participate in this performance to some extent. Yet the inner orientation of every individual remains profoundly important.

The first and most essential step is to stop identifying with linear time and instead embrace a universal, cosmic understanding of time and its possibilities rather than an exclusively Earth-centered one.

One day, when your journey through this incarnation comes to an end and your consciousness is no longer bound to the physical body, you will understand how significant it was not to participate in the artificial narrative of linear time—and how profoundly that choice strengthened the sovereignty of your Spirit.

From the book by Tori Ni

Practice of Dialogue with the Archetypes of World Cultures


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