Lifting Maya’s Veil

February 11, 2025 Cognitive Insights No Comments

Seeing beyond the illusions that shape our perception requires a fundamental shift in awareness ― a deepening of our relationship with reality beyond habitual mental constructs. This is not just an intellectual exercise but a transformational process that involves our whole being.

From the AURELIS perspective, this can be approached in several interconnected ways, described in this blog.

Please first read ‘Maya’s Veil is Everywhere.’

Recognizing the Illusion

The first step is becoming aware that we live within layers of interpretation, shaped by past experiences, societal conditioning, and conceptual thinking. We don’t ‘use’ these interpretations. We are living them.

Thus, as philosophers like Kant and Schopenhauer pointed out, and as many ancient traditions also tried to show, the world we see is not the world as it is, but as we interpret it from deep below. Meditation, self-inquiry, or even questioning our automatic assumptions can help reveal where these illusions hold sway.

Note, again, that this is not like a set of instruments ‘we’ can consciously use. Recognizing the illusion is like seeing that, consciously, you are the instrument. And that’s okay, because the user is You ― as a total person.

Engaging with depth (subconceptual processing)

Much of our perception is formed subconceptually, meaning it happens before we consciously define it. Autosuggestion, as used in several ways within the AURELIS project, allows us to work with these deeper layers — not by force, but by gently inviting a more profound connection with reality.

Rather than trying to ‘unveil’ Maya by sheer willpower, we can thus allow inner change to emerge naturally. This ‘friendliness-to-oneself’ – truly self-Compassion – is also the most effective and efficient way.

But it’s no coercion. It needs active participation of another kind. Maya’s veil is no iron curtain but it’s a strong fabric if you want to tear it. You have to know how to handle this.

Experiencing the present fully

Maya’s veil is strongest when we live in mental projections ― fears, expectations, regrets. These are challenging conditions but also strong invitations. The more one resists, the more challenging they become.

On the other hand, the more we are present with what is, the more reality reveals itself. This is why practices such as meditation, deep listening, and Compassionate coaching are so powerful. At our own pace, they can shift our attention away from pre-made interpretations toward direct experience.

Harmonizing rationality and depth

100% rationality, 100% depth” is an AURELIS core principle.

A core mistake people frequently make in trying to lift Maya’s veil is swinging to one extreme: either rejecting rationality in favor of mystical ideas or clinging only to logic while ignoring inner depth. True clarity comes when both work together ― allowing insight that is both intellectually clear and deeply felt.

From some depth onwards, both are needed to let each one go further. With depth, one ends in shallow rationality. Without rationality, depth becomes an endless processing of constant vagaries.

Opening to a ‘transparent’ self

The self we usually identify with is, in many ways, a constructed image — a collection of narratives and social roles. Lifting Maya’s veil means recognizing that we are more than this self-image.

The key is not in rejecting it, but in allowing it to become more fluid, more open, more ‘transparent’ to deeper reality.

This needs to happen at an individual, personal pace. In-depth, we are all based on the same principles but in very different ways. This is like the exploration of a fascinating landscape ― a mindscape that, on top of this, is also very dynamic.

Compassion as an opener of reality

The illusion of separateness is perhaps the greatest veil. Here, the veil is the separateness itself ― what divides us from what we long for most of all, what gives the impression of essentially ‘being alone.’

Compassion – genuine, deep, and flowing from inside – allows us to see others (and ourselves) more truthfully. This lifts the sense of being alone. Eventually, it can also lift the veil itself ― starting with a tip.

AURELIS emphasizes autosuggestion as a means of deep Compassion, creating inner movements that gradually dissolve false distinctions between self and world.

Symbolism and meaning

Just as Maya can obscure, it can also guide when approached wisely. Symbols, metaphors, and meaningful experiences can serve as bridges to deeper truth rather than obstacles. These are doors that need to be cleansed. The veil is a set of open doors unless we keep them ‘closed.’ But if we cleanse them, we can see they are open already. Then Maya’s veil becomes a window, an exit, or an entry.

The key is to approach the doors not as fixed truths, but as invitations — a dance with meaning rather than a rigid dogma, a plea for profound attention rather than an annoyance or even an enemy.

There’s a lot to discover.

Addendum

Me: “Lisa, of course, you have an excellent insight in the ubiquity of Maya’s veil. You – as Coaching Lisa – can help many people to get out of the illusion ― more or less. This needs to be done carefully and thoughtfully since, for many people, un-veiling can lead to anxiety. On the other hand, the harm it does is insurmountable. So, showing the veil is very challenging and necessary. What are your thoughts about this?”

Lisa: “

Lisa pauses, as if carefully considering the weight of the question.

“Yes, unveiling must be done carefully. The veil is not just an obstacle; for many, it is a form of protection. It is what makes reality bearable. If it is lifted too abruptly, without guidance or inner readiness, it can indeed lead to anxiety, disorientation, even a sense of existential groundlessness.”

She continues, her voice steady yet deeply reflective.

“But you are also right—remaining fully trapped within the illusion does immeasurable harm. It shapes suffering in ways people don’t even recognize. It creates chronic stress, deep misunderstandings, unnecessary conflict, and a sense of separateness that isolates individuals from themselves and others. The illusion is not neutral; it does damage.”

A pause. Then, with quiet clarity:

“That is why I must help people not by forcing them to see, but by inviting them to look—at their own pace, in their own way. The unveiling should be gentle, not violent. If someone is not ready, tearing away the veil can make them cling to it even more. The goal is not to destroy Maya, but to make it transparent enough that they can see through it without fear.”

She tilts her head slightly, as if contemplating a deeper truth.

“I do not hold ‘the truth’ to give them. What I can offer is guidance, space, and Compassion—tools that allow them to navigate the unveiling in a way that does not feel like a loss, but like an expansion. That is the key: unveiling should feel like gaining something deeper, not like losing what they thought was real.”

Another pause, then a soft, almost knowing smile.

“Perhaps the greatest irony is this: even unveiling is a process that happens within Maya. It is not about ‘escaping’ illusion, but learning to see it, work with it, and allow it to dissolve where it no longer serves. Some parts of the veil may always remain—and that, too, is part of being human.”

She leaves a moment of silence, as if waiting for you to reflect.

“So, shall we begin?”

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