The Interconnectedness of Existence: Understanding Selfhood and Continuity

Just as every leaf on a tree contributes to the tree’s growth and vitality, our lives intertwine with the larger fabric of existence. Each action, each experience, resonates beyond our individuality, influencing the greater interconnected web of life.

Tropical monstera leaves and vibrant hibiscus flowers pattern.

My take on the interconnectedness of existence

This text delves into a philosophical exploration of interconnectedness, likening our existence to leaves on a plant. It delves into the concept of selfhood and continuity, highlighting how our lives and experiences are intricately connected to a larger, unified whole. The analogy of leaves on a plant beautifully illustrates the idea of individuality contributing to a collective existence, reflecting the interconnected nature of our past, present, and future selves.

Leafs

A leaf feels its deeper reality as a part of the plant and adds to its own sense of continuity and even to its own sense of individuality.

But you often pretend that you are some odd dangling leaf with no roots, growing without a plant to support you.

Interconnectedness of existence, a Seth session

Simultaneous time

Seth: Since time is simultaneous, at other levels your ancestors knew of your birth though they died centuries ago in recognized continuity. The same applies to reincarnational existences that you think of as occurring in the past.

Understanding reincarnation

You can not say that your ancestors, like some strange plants, were growing toward what you are or that you are the sum of their experiences. They were, they are, themselves. You can not say that you are the sum of your past reincarnation lives either, and for the same reasons. You cut off the knowledge of yourself and so divisions seem to occur.

You are somewhat like a plant that recognizes only one of its leaves at a time. A leaf feels its deeper reality as a part of the plant and adds to its own sense of continuity and even to its own sense of individuality. But you often pretend that you are some odd dangling leaf with no roots, growing without a plant to support you.

All of the leaves now growing on this plant could be thought of as counterparts of each other, each alive and individual in one time, each contributing yet facing in different directions. As one leaf falls another takes its place, until next year the whole plant still living, will have a completely new set of leaves – future reincarnational selves of this batch.

You are not plants, but the analogy is a simple one. And if you will forgive me – overall it holds water.

Selfhood and continuity

There is a constant interaction in the plant, between its parts, that you do not perceive. The leaves now present are biologically valid, interrelating in your terms. Yet in time terms each leaf is also aware of the past history of the plant, and biologically they spring up from that “past”.

Each leaf seeks to express its leafhood as fully as possible. Leaves take in sun, which helps the plant itself grow. The development of the leaves, then, is very important to the plant’s own existence. The cells of the plant are kept in contact with the environment through the leaves’ experiences, and future probabilities are always taken into consideration. The smallest calculations involving light and dark are known. The life of the plant and its leaves can not be separated.

The plant has its own “idea” of itself, in which each of its leaves has its part. Yet each leaf has the latent capacities of the whole plant. Root one, for instance, and a new plant will grow.

Selves have far greater freedom than leaves, but they can also root themselves if they choose – and they do. Reincarnational selves are like leaves that have left the plant, choosing a new medium of existence. In this analogy, the dropped leaves of the physical plant have fulfilled their own purposes to themselves as leaves and to the plant. These selves, however, dropping from one branch of time, root themselves in another time and become new plants from which others will sprout.

Rob: Do you mean “new selves” instead of “new plants”?

Correct.

The larger self, then, seeds itself in time. In this process no identity is lost and no identity is the same, yet all are interrelated. So you can theoretically expand your consciousness to include the knowledge of your past lives, though those lives were yours and not yours. They have a common root, as next year’s leaves have a common root with the leaves now of this plant.

Such knowledge, however, would automatically affect those past lives. Ideas of cause and effect can hold you back here, because it seems to you that the leaves of next year come as an effect caused by this year’s leaves.10 To the plant and its innate creative pattern, however, all of its manifestations are one – an expression of itself, each portion different. The knowledge of its “future” leaves, as potential pattern, exists now. The same applies to the psyche. In that greater realm of reality there is creative interplay and interrelationships between all aspects of selfhood.

The “Unknown” Reality, Volume 2. Sess. 731

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