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In this episode of "A Changed Mind", our host, David Bayer, explores the interconnected wisdom of six spiritual avatars—Abraham, Moses, Krishna, Jesus, Muhammad, and Buddha—each bringing a unique frequency that shaped human history and consciousness.
David weaves together their core teachings, revealing a hidden, unified code for personal and societal transformation. By understanding and embodying these teachings, listeners are invited to unlock a seventh frequency: attention sovereignty, the collective awakening that empowers individuals to shape reality consciously.
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Available on Amazon: A Changed Mind: Go Beyond Self Awareness, Rewire Your Brain & Reengineer Your Reality
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06:44 Structure and Law: Moses’ Contribution
09:15 Purposeful Action and Dharma: Krishna’s Teaching
16:11 Embodiment and Love: Jesus’ Code
21:08 Societal Spirituality at Scale: Muhammad’s Message
"Each one brought something completely different, not competing, not contradicting, but completing. When you stack them in order, a pattern emerges that has been hidden in plain sight for thousands of years."
"Jesus showed what was possible when a human being actually is the law—not just by external action, but through internal mastery. What you think is as important, if not more important, than what you do."
"Attention is not just a psychological resource; it is the creative force through which we shape our lives. Where we place our attention determines what we build, what we pursue, what we imagine, and ultimately what becomes our reality."
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We've been taught that all religions are separate. But what if each of the prophets and avatars from each religion actually held a piece of a universal code? And what if understanding how all of their primary teachings weave together is the key for you to unlock a power that's greater than any single religions alone? Well, in this episode, I'm going to break down the 6 frequencies that 6 avatars brought to humanity, from Abraham all the way through Buddha. And I'm going to show you how they connect into one unified code for consciousness. Because when you understand how all 6 fit together, you unlock a 7th frequency, and that frequency is so powerful that reality bends to your will.
Welcome to A Changed Mind, a journey into the topics that matter to you most, from the neuroscience and spirituality of mindset and personal growth, to groundbreaking strategies for health, wealth, and relationships, to open and honest conversations about pressing global issues such as the environment, censorship, corporate capture and democracy. Each and every episode reminds us of the certainty of the goodness of the future and provides the teachings, tools, and timeless wisdom inspiring you to create real lasting change in your life and in the world. If you've been desiring a sanctuary for your spirit, a place to go to tune out the distraction, negativity, and doom and gloom so that you can tap into the deep power, the vibrancy, and the potential you have inside, you're in the right place. Welcome to A Changed Mind.
All right, guys. While there are many different teachers that could be referred to as prophets, there are 6 primary avatars that came in with a frequency that transformed humanity at that time. So they came in with such powerful energy that 6 distinct religions emerged from their presence. Now, for most of our lives, we look at these 6 religions as competing. Like separate books on a shelf, and a lot of people feel like, look, my religion is right, your religion is wrong. In fact, wars have been fought over this for thousands of years, but what if they're actually chapters in the same book? What I mean by that is what if one of these avatars came with a piece of the code for human evolution, and when you put them together, you get the complete operating system for consciousness. And so I started mapping this out. I was looking at like what each one of them actually came to teach at the core. Stripped away all the dogma, all the institutional religion that were layered on top. And what I found literally blew my mind. So each one brought something completely different, not competing, not contradicting, but completing. And when you stack them in order, when you see what the first one laid down and what the next one built on top of that, a pattern emerges that I have never heard anyone talk about. So I'm going to walk you through each one. By the end of this episode, you're going to see a framework for consciousness that has been hidden in plain sight for thousands of years. All right, so we're gonna start with the first of the avatars, the first of the prophets, and that is Abraham. Abraham is the first of the code bringers, and it's important to understand that before the biblical person Abraham had his experience, most cultures in the Near East practiced a number of different things. Number one, they practiced polytheism. In other words, there were many gods that were worshiped. Oftentimes one person would worship many gods at once. And they were tied to things like forces of nature or tied to the territory of the land. And the relationship between men and God was a relationship of appeasement. So if you kept the gods happy, the gods would reward you. They would reward you with protection. They would reward you with great harvests of your crops. And then Abraham comes along, and Abraham had an experience which was a personal relationship with one God. And so there are two distinctions here. Number one is the aspect of the personal relationship. In fact, you can describe this as Abraham's identity shifted. He now found his identity as one who has a relationship with God, and that God wants to have a relationship with you. Number 2, it's not a relationship of appeasement. It's a chosen relationship. In other words, Abraham was chosen. His relationship with God wasn't inherited through the land or inherited through the tribe. It was a personal relationship that was given to Abraham. and so there was a promise associated with this. Not only was it one God and one relationship, but it was a personal relationship, and this became the core of Abraham, or man's new identity. And there's a famous story of Abraham being asked by God to sacrifice his son, and this is a really powerful story, and it happens in Genesis. And the reason why this story is so interesting is, again, because up until that time, the relationship of appeasel that a human had with God often involved a sacrifice. In fact, back then, there in pagan cultures was a tradition of child sacrifice. That was like the greatest sacrifice that you could make. And so here God asks Abraham to make the traditional sacrifice, and Abraham shows his trust in his relationship with God that he moves forward with an intention to actually do it. I mean, imagine for a moment being so committed and loyal to your God that you would sacrifice the thing that you love most, but then God stops the sacrifice. and this is the story of the child spared. And so this is God's way of saying, hey, we don't do the old way anymore. We're now moving into an identity of you're a human being, you're chosen, you're my child. You will no longer sacrifice children. You will no longer make any type of sacrifice at all, and I will have a personal relationship with you. And so this is where the contract with a higher power emerges, this idea of a covenant or a contract that God makes to his children who choose to accept this relationship with God. Again, not based on territory, not based on culture. Not based on a singular personal relationship that— but it— let me take a step back. This is the story of the child spared. And so this is God's way of saying, hey, we don't do the old way anymore. We're now moving into an identity of you are a human being, you are chosen, you are my child. You will no longer sacrifice children. We will no longer make any type of sacrifice at all. And instead, I will have a personal relationship with you. This is where the contract with a higher power emerges, the idea of a covenant or a contract. That God makes to his children who choose to accept this relationship with God. Again, not based on territory, not based on culture, but based on a singular personal relationship that requires trust and faith in that higher power. So this is a new identity for humanity, and that's what Abraham brought. So Abraham comes, and through this frequency of Abraham's experience, what's available now for all human beings is the personal contract or covenant or relationship with a singular loving God. But the identity, which is the first part of the code, is the starting point. The next step is, how do I function within this identity? And that is the frequency, or the part of the code that Moses then brings. So Moses is the central figure of the Exodus story, which represents a new freedom and a promised land and the leaving behind of the old the old tyranny and the old slavery. And so we can think about Abraham as introducing this identity contract. That new identity alone, however, cannot sustain societal structure. I mean, think about it. If you have this identity and a relationship with God that is a loving God, then it's no longer a sacrifice, appeasement-based polytheistic culture. That's fine, but you have to have a structure within which to operate as this new identity. So Moses brings that structure. and that's why what Moses brought is referred to as the Law of Moses. And that's why the key event in the giving of the law at Sinai is so important, because now you have these Ten Commandments. And so these become the structure or the rules by which one must operate with this new identity. Because if you have this new identity without any structure, it becomes chaos. If you have structure without the personal loving relationship with God as an identity, you have this cold, over-legalized implementation of this, like, non-spiritual rule-based society with too much structure. So you have to have both because a truly liberated people have to have a new identity and they have to have a code of conduct. And we see this in the actual story of Exodus, which is the leaving of Egypt. And that leaving of Egypt is only one step. If you don't have the right type of psychological structure, meaning a code to operate by, it's very easy to fall back into your old behaviors. We see this. The Hebrews who have been freed from this tyranny want to actually go back to it. So Moses brings these commandments, like, thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, you shall honor your mother and your father. You will honor the relationship that you now have, this new identity with God. You will not lie. So this is a structure that the free human can now operate within. And we take for granted these commandments today. It's like, yeah, of course I don't commit murder. Of course it's not a good thing to lie. Of course it's not a good thing to have sinful, lustful thoughts about my neighbor's wife or husband. But this wasn't the standard practice at the time. And so this identity brought by Abraham was so new to the people that they needed a code of conduct, which was brought through the Law of Moses. So now we have two of the first really integral pieces of a new humanity, of a new freedom, and of a new consciousness. So Abraham introduces a new identity and Moses introduces a structure. The next challenge humanity faces becomes deeply personal. Because once a person knows who they are and once they understand the moral structure that governs life, there's a new question that inevitably emerges, which is, what is mine to do here? So identity answers who you are. Law tells you what is right and wrong, but neither fully answers the most personal question of all, which is, what role am I meant to play in the unfolding reality? And this is the transmission associated with Krishna. So Krishna introduces a concept that becomes central to Eastern philosophies, which is dharma. And dharma's often translated as duty, but that translation is really too limited. It's better understood as aligned participation in reality, like a right action individualized for you based on who you came here to be. So dharma is the responsibility that belongs uniquely to you based on your nature, your position in life, and the moment that you're living in. It's the recognition that Each human life carries a role in the greater order of existence. And Krishna delivers this transmission in one of the most dramatic moments in ancient literature. And that is a famous teaching that appears in a dialogue in the Bhagavad Gita. This is a section of the epic Indian text known as the Mahabharata. And at the center of this story is a warrior named Arjuna. And Arjuna is one of the most honorable characters in the entire epic. But at the most decisive moment of his life, he has a crisis. And the story is this: Arjuna's on the battlefield. There are two armies facing each other, and the conflict is a civil war between two branches of the same royal family. And Arjuna's one of the greatest warriors alive, and his role is to fight on behalf of justice. But as he looks across the battlefield, he sees people he knows. He sees teachers who raised him. He sees relatives he grew up with. He sees friends he once stood by. In the opposing army, and this breaks Arjuna. So he puts down his weapons. He doesn't know what he's going to do. His mind starts to spiral, and he turns to Krishna and he says, I can't do this. You know, even if we win, what kind of victory would this be if it comes at this kind of cost? And so Arjuna is experiencing this moral crisis where he has these competing values: loyalty to family, commitment to justice, compassion for human life, and he no longer knows how to act or what to do or what his role is in all of this. And this moment represents these moments that we all face in our own lives where we're conflicted, like where life is no longer simple because just having the Ten Commandments isn't enough now because you can know the law, but you can still be unwilling to implement it. You can want to do the right thing, but still hesitate to act. In Arjuna, Represents that moment in our consciousness. And this is where Krishna speaks, and he doesn't speak by giving Arjuna another rule or more structure. Instead, he introduces a philosophical principle. He says, look, every human being has a dharma, a rightful role within the order of existence. And dharma is not about doing whatever feels comfortable. It's about recognizing that there is a responsibility to your personal nature and your personal position in life. And Arjuna's dharma is clear. He's a warrior in a conflict that will determine whether justice or corruption governs the kingdom. So his role is not to escape the situation. His role is to actually stand in the discomfort. And Krishna explains that Arjuna's suffering is not caused by the war itself, but by attachment to the outcome. Arjuna's in his head around who's going to suffer, who's going to judge me, what's the future going to look like? And in doing so, he loses control of the only thing that he can actually control. Which is whether he acts in alignment with his dharma. So Krishna's teaching becomes one of the most profound spiritual insights in human history, which is this: you are responsible for your participation in reality, but not for controlling the results of that participation. In other words, human beings do not control outcomes, but they control alignment. And so Krishna tells Arjuna that what's creating his paralysis is attachment. And these attachments cloud judgment and they weaken courage. And so Krishna gives Arjuna a radical instruction. He says, act fully, act courageously, act in alignment with your dharma, but release the illusion that you control the results. And so this teaching becomes known as karma yoga, which is the path of purposeful action performed without attachment to personal reward. It's the realization that life itself is the arena where your consciousness is developed. In other words, your responsibilities, your decisions, your struggles, These are not distractions from spiritual life. They're actually the place where spirituality happens. Now, the earlier transmissions focus primarily on identity and moral structure, but identity and law don't tell a person how to live a meaningful life. They don't answer this question that every person faces, which is, hey, what's my role here? And Krishna addresses that question. He introduces the idea that each person has to discover their rightful participation in the order of life. And the question is no longer simply What do I believe? The question becomes, what is mine to do? So now you're probably wondering, well, what happened to Arjuna? Well, Arjuna moves into the battle. The battle that follows is long and devastating. It becomes one of the most famous wars in ancient literature. Many great warriors die on both sides, and eventually Arjuna's side prevails. But the deeper point of the story is not the victory. It's the transformation that happens inside Arjuna before the battle even begins, because the true crisis was never the war. The crisis was Arjuna's inability to act when the moment required it. And so Krishna's teaching restores his clarity, not by removing the complexity of life, but by reminding him of his dharma. And that's why the story has survived for thousands of years, because every human eventually faces their own version of that battlefield. Because moments when life becomes morally complex, there are moments when the stakes feel really high. There are moments when we're tempted to avoid the responsibility that belongs to us. And in those moments, The one question is the same question that Krishna asked Arjuna, not how do you guarantee the outcome, but what action is mine to take here? And when that question becomes clear, the path forward becomes clear as well. So if we trace the developmental progression, Abraham introduces identity through covenant, Moses introduces structure through law, and Krishna introduces right action through dharma. And it's at this point humanity has identity. Moral structure, and purposeful action. But something's still missing because the law can be followed outwardly while the heart still remains unchanged, or the mind still remains unchanged. Like, purpose can be pursued while ego still drives the action. So the next stage in consciousness asks, well, what would it be like for these principles to be fully embodied in a human being? And this is where Jesus enters the arc. So Jesus represents a shift from concept or philosophy to embodiment or integration. Moses brings the laws, but Jesus was the law of Moses. In other words, Jesus showed what was possible when a human being actually is the law, not just by external action, but through internal mastery. So in the teachings preserved in the New Testament, Jesus repeatedly reframes the religious framework in relationship to the law of Moses because the religious culture of that time had become too rigid in following the structure of the law and didn't fully understand what the law is not, that the law frankly is not meant to be rigidly followed, but it is to be understood and embodied as an expression of the love that only a human being is capable of. So the center point of Jesus's transmission was that true transformation must occur inside the human being, not by following external regulations. For example, he reframed several of Moses's laws, showing that the law can be violated not just by external action, but in your own mind. For example, he says the law says don't murder, but then points out that thinking ill towards another person is really the same as harming them. He says the law says don't commit adultery, but lusting after someone is the same as the act itself. And so with Jesus, the emphasis shifts from behavior alone to consciousness itself. So what you think is as important, if not more important, than what you do. What you're doing is far less important than who you're being. And one of the most radical statements attributed to Jesus is this idea that the kingdom of God is within you. This idea transforms the spiritual landscape because before this moment, the sacred was often understood as something external. It's found in temples or rituals or some form of future redemption. But Jesus relocates the center of spiritual life to the inner world. He suggests that the divine relationship introduced through Abraham, structured through Moses, and lived through purposeful action in Krishna's teaching can actually become fully embodied in a human being. So the kingdom is no longer merely a future reality or distant promise. It becomes a lived state of consciousness. Jesus also introduces something deeper as the organizing principle of life, which is love, right? Not merely affection or feeling, but radical, unconditional love. He teaches love not only for friends, but even for enemies. And forgiveness becomes a central part of his gospel. Compassion becomes the highest expression of spiritual maturity. And this is a profound shift in the moral framework, because the law tells people what they should do. Love transforms the motivation behind what they do. And when love becomes the foundation of action, the law truly becomes fulfilled from within rather than enforced from outside. And again, the Jesus Code is really about embodiment. He was the message. He lived the message. And as a byproduct of his embodiment of the highest spiritual principles, he was able to perform supernatural miracles. He heals the sick. He feeds the 5,000 from a loaf of bread. He walks on water. He raises himself from the dead. And he says, you who follow what I have become, can do even greater miracles than me. And so in this sense, Jesus becomes a living demonstration of what it means for identity, law, and purpose to be integrated within a transformed heart. And that message is not simply theory. It's modeled through a human life. And this is why many people interpret Jesus not just as a teacher, but as an example of what humanity can become. So the transmission associated with Jesus really represents a new stage in consciousness because that transformation is no longer primarily about belonging to a covenant people or obeying a set of laws or fulfilling a social role. It becomes about the inner rebirth of the individual. The human being becomes the place where the divine relationship unfolds. And so the transformation is internal first, and then it externalizes as behavior. But the root cause is the internal change. And by the time the teachings associated with Jesus had spread across the Mediterranean world, A powerful idea had really taken root. Human beings could transform internally. The divine relationship was not merely external law or tribal identity. The kingdom of God could be experienced within the human heart. But this created a new question. If individuals can experience spiritual awakening internally, how does that awakening become the organizing principle of an entire society? How does a civilization itself reflect the values of justice and compassion and alignment with the divine? And this is where Muhammad enters the stage. He brings the next transmission, the fifth of sixth. Muhammad's transmission isn't about how to develop yourself personally, although there are certainly aspects of personal spiritual development in his teachings. But where he takes the previous teachings further is that he talks about how everything that came before— the identity, the structure, the dharma, the personal embodiment— can actually be applied to the structure of an entire society. So ironically, I sometimes think about Muhammad's teachings as about how to be Jesus at scale. I actually find that there's not as great a distinction or difference between Islam and Christianity as many people seem to present. And from a non-religious standpoint, but more from a theory of consciousness standpoint, the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Quran they really play out like a trilogy. Now, I know some people are going to be angry about that because people treat their religions like their sports teams, but I'm just telling you that this is the way that I see it. In fact, if you read the Quran, the first, gosh, I don't know, 30 or 40 pages is basically a reprimanding of God's chosen people saying, hey, look, we sent you Abraham and you didn't listen. We sent you Moses and you didn't listen. We sent you Jesus And you're still not embodying the principles and honoring the covenant and the contract that God has extended to you. And so now we send you Muhammad to remind you once again. So Muhammad comes to remind us once again and to also talk about how we can go from one to many, how we can go from an individual awakening to awakening as an entire society where spiritual consciousness can become literally the foundation of a new civilization architecture. I mean, this is so cool. So Islamic tradition often refers to Muhammad as the seal of the prophets, meaning he's the final stamp on a long chain of these prophetic messages. And whether or not you want to accept that theological claim, the historical impact of Muhammad's teachings are undeniable. And what Muhammad communicated, which is at the core of Quranic tradition, is that society itself should reflect these divine principles. That spiritual life is not confined to temples or personal meditation, that it should influence economics, justice, community responsibility, and governments. And the goal is a community where spiritual awareness and social structure actually support one another. And our daily— and note that it's daily— participation in spiritual practice is essential. While also personal, it's communal. Okay? And that's why you see Muslims praying together as a synchronized force or expression of the divine covenant in relationship with God. It's the idea of going from one bird to a flock and how that unlocks a super synchronicity and a super intelligence. From one bee to the whole hive, from one fish to the entire shoal. And so the teachings of Muhammad, his transmission, his vibration, his frequency, are not only must you do it, but we must all do it together. So Muhammad's transmission is about literally reshaping all of the systems that bring human beings together and infusing them with the spiritual technology and the code that each of the other previous avatars helped to construct. And that now takes us to the sixth avatar, because even when identity and structure and dharma and loving embodiment and spiritual community are present, there is still one fundamental human problem. Which remains, and that is suffering itself. And this is the problem that the Buddha addresses. Now, the figure known as the Buddha was born as Siddhartha around the 5th century AD in what is now northern India or Nepal. And unlike many of the other figures in the arc, Siddhartha was not initially a prophet or a lawgiver. He was raised as a prince, but as a young man, he encounters sickness and aging and death, and he realizes something that every human eventually confronts, which is that suffering is unavoidable. It's an unavoidable part of life. And so this realization becomes the starting point of his developmental process. So where the earlier prophets focused largely on humanity's relationship with the divine or with moral order, Buddha asked a different question. He asked, why do human beings suffer even when they have everything they think they want? And of course, we see that people want money, they have money, they still suffer. People want relationships, they have relationships, they still suffer. People want careers or health or material things, they get those things, They still suffer. And so what Buddha explored was the nature of suffering itself. And what he discovered was that suffering doesn't arise because there are difficult challenges in life, but it arises because of the way that the mind functions and the way that mind relates to reality. The clinging that we have to what we want, the resisting that we have to do what we don't want to do, the stories that we tell ourselves, the beliefs we have. All of these things create suffering. In other words, suffering is tied to both attachment and illusion. And this is where we get the idea of awakening and why the word Buddha means the awakened one. And what Buddha created as the path out of suffering was referred to as the Eightfold Path of Virtue. So he created a path or a structure that others could follow with practices such as meditation and mindfulness to help people see clearly how their thoughts and their emotions and their attachments arise and then ultimately pass away so that they could become the observers of their inner world, not attached to their thoughts and their emotions that they experienced. And so through this awareness, the self-awareness, individuals gradually free themselves from the mental patterns that create suffering. And so where the previous avatars focused on humanity's relationship with identity or law or purpose or love or community, Buddha focuses on consciousness itself. He shifts the attention to the mechanisms of the mind. And he suggests that no matter how well a society is structured or how aligned we are with our dharma in the world, suffering will persist if we continue to remain trapped in unconscious patterns of thinking. So Buddha introduces this missing dimension, which is the clarity of mind. He teaches that liberation begins when the human being starts seeing reality clearly and releasing the old patterns that create suffering. And in fact, in many ways, this is a capstone on the Six Avatar Transmissions, because the first five can only occur if you have clarity of mind, which is what Buddha gives us a structured path to achieve. So when you step back and look at all these transmissions together, something really amazing begins to emerge across centuries, across cultures, across different civilizations. Humanity has been given pieces of a code, not all at once, but gradually, like keys appearing at different moments in our history. Each one unlocks a deeper level of human potential individually. Every single one is powerful, but when you weave them together, they create a pattern, almost like an evolutionary arc of consciousness unfolding through time. And when those pieces begin to integrate, There is a next natural question, which is, well, what comes next? Is there a 7th avatar? And many traditions have speculated about another great teacher who will arrive at the end of the cycle, like someone who will guide humanity into the next stage of evolution. But my personal view is that the 7th avatar is not an individual. It is a collective awakening, and some traditions refer to this as Christ consciousness. Others describe it as a planetary shift in awareness, but what it really means is something far more practical. It means that humanity, and I believe it's occurring right now, is beginning to embody the message that was once delivered through these six avatars. The teachings that once appeared through prophets and avatars have stopped being external instructions and have started to become an actual change in human beings. Like They become something that we are now living now more than ever before, more people living it than ever before. And as we begin implementing these pieces of the code in our own lives, something profound begins to happen inside the human being. Our perception of reality starts to change. The fear and the trauma that have been living latent in our nervous systems, the patterns that quietly shape how we interpret life and how we react to uncertainty and how we protect ourselves, begin to metabolize and release. The limiting beliefs that once defined what we thought was possible and impossible begin losing their grip. And as those patterns dissolve, something amazing and incredibly powerful begins to free up. And what frees up is our attention, because so much of human behavior is driven by where our attention is pulled. So when fear is unresolved, attention is constantly captured by threat, by scarcity, and by survival. But when Fear begins to clear when the nervous system is no longer operating from these old patterns. Your attention becomes available to you once again. And attention is not just a psychological resource. It is the creative force through which we shape our lives. Where we place our attention determines what we build, what we pursue, what we imagine, and ultimately what becomes our reality. And so when attention is hijacked by fear or distraction, we create limitation from those patterns. But when attention becomes conscious and intentional, our creation becomes exponential. It becomes intentional, it becomes conscious. And this is what I mean by attention sovereignty. So the ability to direct your attention toward what you want to create instead of constantly reacting to what the world places in front of you is the thing that can change not only your life, but can change civilization. And the challenge is that we now live in a time where attention has become one of the most valuable resources on the planet. Think about it. Entire industries exist to capture it. Algorithms are designed to hold it. Media cycles amplify fear and anger because these emotions keep people engaged. Political systems play off of it. Social platforms monetize it. In many ways, the modern economy has discovered a very simple truth. If you can control someone's attention, you can influence the reality they experience. And so millions of people move through life in a constant state of reaction pulled from one narrative or crisis to another. But when the human being begins reclaiming his or her attention, something extraordinary becomes possible. Because when attention becomes conscious, creation becomes conscious. People begin building lives that reflect prosperity instead of fear. They begin building businesses that reflect a true expression of themselves versus jobs that they hate. They begin building relationships that reflect presence instead of projection and rejection. And when enough people begin living this way, something even bigger begins to happen. Civilization itself begins to change because civilization is ultimately shaped by the collective attention of the people who participate in it. So when large numbers of human beings begin directing their attention toward creativity and collaboration and meaningful creation through love and purpose, the structures of society inevitably begin to reorganize around those priorities. Old systems that depend on manipulation and unconscious behavior begin to lose their power. New systems begin to emerge, systems built around awareness and responsibility and conscious participation in reality. And in that sense, much of the chaos we see in the world today may actually be serving a deeper purpose because the conflicts, the corruption, the instability, all of it is acting like a mirror. It is a reflection of a civilization whose attention has been fragmented and manipulated for decades. And so these mirrors also invite reflection. They force us to decide who are we and what do we truly want to create. And what we may be witnessing right now is not simply the unraveling of old systems, but the pressure that is catalyzing humanity into its next stage of development. A stage where individuals reclaim their attention, where consciousness becomes the foundation of creation, where humanity begins organizing at scale around a higher level of awareness. And when that happens, The systems that no longer serve humanity gradually dissolve and new systems will begin to take their place. So this is, in my opinion, the 7th unlock: attention sovereignty. Not waiting for another prophet, but humanity itself becoming conscious enough to shape the world it inhabits as a result of the previous 6. But hey, that's just what I think. I wanna know what you think. Comment below. I would love to know. This is not a one-way conversation, but if this episode has landed for you, if something shifted, I would want to invite you to go deeper. And the first step is absolutely free. Head on over to davidberr.com, drop your email. You'll get immediate access to my free mind hack ebook and a free training series. It is the foundation of everything that I teach, how your mind actually works, why you've been stuck, and the exact framework to start changing it today. That's the starting point. and if you're ready to go further, if you want the full system, the tools, the step-by-step methodologies to actually rewire your beliefs and start creating from a completely different identity, check out my courses, the Mind Hack Program, and the Whole Human Framework. The links are in the show notes in the description. Thousands of impact-driven leaders and visionaries and people just like you have gone through this work and it has changed everything. Their businesses, their relationships, their careers, their sense of who they are. All the links are in the show notes. And again, if this episode gave you something, do me a favor, share it. Pay it forward to someone who needs to hear it. Subscribe to this channel. Be a part of our community. This is not a do-it-yourself journey. It was never meant to be. And I love being on the journey with you. I love you so much. Thank you for your time, your energy, and your spirit today. And I will see you in the next episode. Hey, it's David.
One more thing if you want to go even deeper on everything we've talked about on today's episode, don't forget to jump over to www.davidberriman.com. Www.changedmindhacker.com. You can find the link in the show notes and subscribe to our newsletter. A couple of times a week, I'm going to be sending you the latest episodes that we've released along with additional free trainings. You'll get immediate access to my free mind hack ebook and go even deeper into all the tools, the technologies, and the frameworks that have helped tens of thousands of people establish a changed mind. Don't forget to jump on over to the site, and I will see you in the next episode.