
✦ The Archive
Where the Spell Was First Broken
Before the Field revealed herself, there was the unraveling.
There were stories I had to live all the way through—
illusions I had to hold until they dissolved in my hands.
This page holds those echoes.
These aren’t just blogs.
They are transmissions wrapped in language.
They carry the memory of what it took to see through the spell.
To meet Maya.
To walk HER Leela.
To remember that what’s false often has to be fully lived before it can be released.
Read them as breadcrumbs.
Read them as mirrors.
Read them when you’re ready to remember what you already know.

Dancing with Maya: Navigating the Illusion with Awareness & Joy
The Illusion is Alive—And So Are You
The biggest misunderstanding about Maya is that she is some cruel trickster keeping us from enlightenment. In reality, she is the fabric of existence itself. Without Maya, there is no world, no self, no experience. She is the stage, the actors, and the script—all at once. The key is learning how to move with her, rather than against her.

Who is Maya? The Power Behind the Illusion
Maya. The great weaver. The mother of illusion. The force behind reality as we know it.
She is not just an abstract concept—SHE is alive, moving through existence, shaping perception, experience, and belief. SHE is both the veil and the revealer. The one who binds and the one who liberates. Without HER, there would be no world, no self, no journey.

What Is Maya? The Illusion We All Live In
Imagine looking at the world through a filter—one that colors your experiences, shapes your thoughts, and distorts your view of reality. This filter is so deeply ingrained that you might not even realize it’s there. In the yogic tradition, this filter is called Maya, and it’s the veil of illusion that clouds our perception of what’s real.
Maya isn’t just about what’s “out there.” It’s about what’s “in here,” too. It’s the stories we tell ourselves, the beliefs we cling to, and the expectations that shape our lives. It’s the lens through which we see ourselves, others, and the world—and it often keeps us feeling stuck, disconnected, or searching for something more.