I Draw in the Sky

Freethinking means that you have the freedom to think about everything you want.

Freethinking is the opposite of Buddhism. Buddhism says: return to your breath. Don’t leave the here and now.

Freethinking is more like daydreaming: you are not afraid of leaving the here and now. You trust that you will always find your way back.

Freethinking is also a lot like freerunning or skateboarding. It’s a vibe thing. You can draw the thoughts in your mind and make them visual. It’s phenomenal.

Basically, you want to daydream all day, even while you are walking, for instance. You draw inspiration from everything.

Freethinking also means that you think about things that don’t exist and pretend that they are true. Or that you don’t have any shame toward yourself concerning sexuality.

But the hard part is that, even while I am writing this, I am making it a bit too clinical. It’s more of a doing thing, like drawing.


Consciousness is like religion, where the same mistake is made over and over again.

It’s not about what religion or consciousness is, but what it is to you.

For me, consciousness is my body explaining to me how it works. My stomach tells a story. My thoughts tell stories. Together, they form a beautiful symphony that is me.

Religion, for me, is seeing the unbelievable beauty of life. It’s something that more or less happens in between things, through the lines, when you notice something in day-to-day life that is easily missed.

The point is this: the search for a higher power is not the goal. The goal is the thing that happens along the way.


Frame of Reference

We often disqualify the opinions of others. We think that people who believe we didn’t go to the moon are crazy.

They aren’t.

From their perspective, with the information they got, it can be a perfectly valid assumption.

Do you think people still wouldn’t believe it if they saw it with their own eyes? Or if they had been there themselves as astronauts? Of course not. The reason they don’t believe it is because they base their opinion on the information they received, which is very one-dimensional (television or radio). So they say, “I don’t believe we went to the moon.” And they can technically be right. I wasn’t there either, so it’s a legitimate possibility.

The problem with a lot of people these days is having a constant opinion about other people and what they believe in.

Think about the things you have an opinion on where you don’t realize you actually have a very limited frame of information—just like people who only saw the moon landing on television might have.

The annoyance a lot of people have is that they look at science and realize: you don’t know shit. No, for real. But I also don’t want to play Mr. Know-It-All.

There is also some trust involved. Sometimes you just need to trust people who say, “We went to the moon. I was there.” But still, a person believing we didn’t go to the moon can be equally as right as the person saying we did.


How We Create Reality

When you have your science sunglasses on, all you see is science. You see science everywhere you look.

If you have your religious sunglasses on, it’s the same. It’s very hard to see things from the other side.

I hope that one day people become comfortable trading sunglasses, even if only for a short time.


Is it a particle or a wave? It depends on how you look at it, which is the lesson reality tries to teach you.


How he walked on water. Energy is like water. The inside of your body is water. Good luck.