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Are you doing what you’re meant to do?





”Discover what you love to do, and you’ll never work a single day in your life," I shared with a client yesterday.

The phrase isn’t mine—it belongs to Confucius.

Over the past few weeks, I’ve had clients tell me about various ailments, treated repeatedly through diverse approaches, classical or complementary. These were interpreted through countless concepts, "released" emotionally because that’s the trend, approached positively to follow psychological tendencies, or symbolized in different ways to find metaphysical meanings. Yet, these issues remain unresolved and persist stubbornly.

What does the second sentence have to do with the first?

What’s the connection between health and work?

There’s much to say...

Nearly everything happening in the body is overseen, orchestrated, managed, and directed by the brain.

Except in cases of accidents or poisoning (though even here there’s room for discussion), the nervous system is responsible for the homeostasis and overall health of the body.

This complex system is directly or indirectly influenced by a multitude of factors, including precognitions, perceptions, representations, beliefs, and personal or collective convictions.

The heart of the brain (if it has one) "leaps with joy," as Creangă might say, when its entire structure is perfectly functional, lighting up coherent, complex, and dynamic neural constellations—including a new area of the medial prefrontal neocortex, somehow responsible for our sense of wholeness, the profound expression of our essence, the unseen core of our being.

From a neurophysiological perspective, we didn’t come here to merely "be," as touted on alluring spiritual paths, but to "do."

And we don’t "do" to gain prestige, reputation, image capital, wealth, relationships, or titles (these may be contextual but are not the ultimate point).

Rather, we "do" to bring into form our personal mission, our calling, that latent genius, that perspicacious genetic recipe, those uniquely encrypted phrases in the DNA of billions of cells that make us.

The way I express this is called priority or personal value (the terms aren’t what matter here).

Values can vary in their physical manifestation with age, physiological or psychological conditions, experiences, or significant events. But that unique something remains, waiting to be refined and to find an even more adapted, polished way to reveal itself, to contribute.

Thus, the brain, with balanced and engaged chemistry, aligned with Life, will maintain physiological parameters within healthy limits.

That’s the short and simplified version.

So, are you doing what you’re meant to do?

Do you know what you’ve come here to do?

Where is your attention and interest? Where do you have patience and retention? Where have you practiced before the practice, as Marc Nepo said in Endless Practice?

"...It’s always about practice before the practice.

Sometimes, you need to sit with something for an incomprehensibly long time to feel and understand the mystery of every instrument or craft waiting to be invoked.

In Japan, an apprentice doesn’t dirty their hands with clay or work on the wheel until they’ve observed their master for years.

In Hawaii, before a young person can touch a canoe, they need to sit on ancestral rocks and simply watch the sea.

In Africa, before a child can use a drum, they must feel the skin that will become the instrument and dream of the animal whose heart will guide the percussion.

In Vienna, a talented child must witness the construction of a piano and the assembly of its keys before learning the scales.

In Switzerland, there’s a legend that says every watchmaker must contemplate the passage of time before assembling the tiny pieces and fragments.

These rituals authorize the birth of love for the journey, which is life-giving."

The journey of self-expression, of essence, of innate vocation, is thus life-giving, as the author suggests.

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that today, we’re in the last genetic sequences activated by the Sun, on codon 14 (if you’re unfamiliar with the "Gene Keys" system, I highly recommend the book of the same name by Richard Rudd). It discusses competence, abundance, and power.

Competence isn’t something learned; it’s something you "wake up" to—or not—because you can just as easily remain enslaved to mediocrity or impotent in compromise.

Competence doesn’t mean competitive comparison; it’s creative emanation. It’s a genetic language on your path, in your mission.

Competence is a quality that accompanies our values and work.

Our mission’s realization depends on embodying it.

Competence ensures material success because it’s a morphogenetic field of strength that creates prosperity and, in a way, empowerment. However, it’s not the personal sovereignty you might expect.

"Individual power is merely a myth.

Despite the fact that the 14th Gene Key deals with personal power, its siddhi signifies the end of all things personal.

At this level, we must see humanity as an expansive vessel.

Each human being is just another set of bioenergetic instructions within the extended organism. Individuality is actually the same as interference.

If a cell in the body behaves as if it has its own identity, it cannot function properly. It’s like the windows of that cell are dirty, and information cannot pass efficiently and transparently from the extended organism to the cell.

Disease arises because it believes in independence. We humans are unicellular organisms within a much larger organism.

It’s not we who matter—there is no 'we.'

There is only siddhic programming to create more and more abundance.

Even one person manifesting this siddhi will create waves of prosperity and spiritual well-being wherever they go." —R. Rudd

I’ve posed simple questions, but I know that answering—or, more importantly, putting the answers into action—requires:

-Clarity
-Dedicated work with oneself
-Receptivity to uncomfortable tasks
-A combination of courage and vulnerability to distinguish yourself and achieve your unique something.

I leave the contemplation open for the snow-dusted philosophy of a November day. If you need my support, write to me—I’d be happy to help!

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