Time and consciousness are the reflections of our primary desire

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readOct 24, 2023

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Question from the Internet:

“Could time be a function of consciousness?”

Both time and our present consciousness are simply the reflections of our “primordial” driving force: the insatiable and ever-growing desire to exist and to fulfill ourselves with as much pleasure as we can.

Our mind or intellect works only in order to facilitate the fastest and most optimal fulfillment of our ever-changing and growing desires.

Time and space are subjective and egocentric sensations we need and use in order to measure and calculate the distance or gap between the appearing desires and their fulfillment.

If our desires were fulfilled immediately and most optimally — like in the mother’s womb, for example — we would not feel the concepts of time and space since there would be no gap and delay between the arising desires and their fulfillment.

Our present — 100% self-serving, self-justifying, and self-fulfilling consciousness and calculations would also become obsolete in that case.

We can actually achieve such a state — here and now — when the sensation of time and space disappear, and instead of our original, limited and distorted, 100% egocentric, subjective, and individualistic consciousness and perception of reality, we develop a completely different, totally selfless and unconditionally loving and serving “collective consciousness” and “composite perception of reality.”

This can happen through learning and practicing an existence where each of us would exist and make calculations through the desires and viewpoints of others while completely forgetting about ourselves.

When at least a “critical minority” of people practice this in a special, methodical, and purposeful environment, each will start to feel as if existing in the “mother’s womb” again, where everybody’s needs and desires become immediately fulfilled exactly how they want them to be fulfilled.

Through this mutual “true love” and perfect mutual fulfillment, the sensation and experience of time and space disappear as we all exist “outside of ourselves” in each other, “forgetting” even about physical life or death, sensing a perfect and eternal existence realistically and tangibly through each other.

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Zsolt Hermann
Zsolt Hermann

Written by Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.

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