Most of us were taught - explicitly or implicitly - that the spiritual journey is about believing the right things.
But in the contemplative tradition, the aim is much simpler - and much harder:
It’s to learn how to trust life.
And to trust yourself inside it.
That is what salvation actually is: conscious union with life as it is.
The reason we need a spiritual journey at all is NOT because we are sinful, broken, or deficient. It’s because we don't currently trust life. And we don’t yet trust ourselves inside life.
That mistrust isn’t a moral failure - it’s developmental.
The way we develop into conscious union happens through stages.
Unconscious union. We all start here as infants. There is no separation for the infant between self and world, no subject/object split. Just openness, depedence and belonging.
The Genesis story names this in the garden - where humans are naked, unashamed, at one with God and self and all of life. There is union here, but no consciousness. No reflective self. No meaning-making.
Life, however, isn’t content with unconscious union. What life seems to want is conscious union - chosen presence, not naive openness.
And to get there, we must pass through separation.
Unconscious Separation. As life inevitably overwhelms our nervous system - through pain, fear, confusion or unmet needs - the body learns that not everything is safe. Unconsciously, we begin to divide reality into what we allow and what we avoid.
In the Genesis story, this is when people eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. We begin to separate what appears good and bad. Safe and unsafe. Acceptable and unacceptable. The system contracts - not because it’s sinful, but because it’s trying to survive and belong. We are kicked out of the garden of union not because of something we did wrong, but because we must begin the journey of becoming conscious.
Many of us grow into adulthood still living from these early unconscious strategies - controlling, people-pleasing, numbing, striving, fixing - without realizing they were never conscious choices.
But if we continue on the journey, we then move to…
Conscious Separation. This is where we begin to observe ourselves. We bring awareness to our patterns and strategies and parts. “Why am I like this?” We shine light on the unconscious patterns that have shaped us.
In the biblical narrative, this is confession and repentance. We bring awareness to our patterns, our “flesh,” our “sins,” the things that cause us to separate from self, others and Life. And we confess them. We name them.This stage is usually when people go to therapy, coaching, or doing spiritual work.
But it’s not the destination. If we stay here, we simply learn to manage life better - but without fully trusting it. Awareness without embodiment becomes another form of control.
The journey continues towards conscious union…
Conscious Union. This is not a return to infancy - it’s a new kind of openness - chosen, grounded and resilient. Here, trust becomes possible because the nevous system is updated through experience. What was once avoided is now felt. What was once divided is now integrated.
We don’t’ heal separation through insight alone. Because separation was somatic and relational, it’s healed somatically and relationally - by slowly learning life can be felt without falling apart.
In the biblical narrative, this is living in the kingdom of God, heaven on earth. Not a return to the garden of unconscious union, but the city on a hill - built on real experience.
This is not about belief.
It’s relational capacity. Our ability to relate to and trust Life.
Beliefs live in the mind - ideas, frameworks, theology.
Capacity lives in the body - what you can actually stay present with, feel and allow without needing to control, avoid or contract.
You can believe that life is good and still live braced against it. You can believe God is loving and still feel unsafe relaxing.
Trust isn’t something you decide - it’s something that grows through relational experience. We do this in “prayer” or practicing presence, relationships where we can be seen without performing, community where our defenses can rest, and practices that teach the body that life can be met.
This is what it means to become the kind of human who can rest inside life as it is. To trust it. To live in relationship with is. To live with presence.
Not because everything is now easy. But because you can now feel and welcome everything. You can be present to all of it.
This is salvation.


I love this so much. Salvation as a relational capacity is absolutely dead on.
I love the phrase: Living Life on Life's Terms. It's big in 12 Step spirituality. It's a reminder that I'm not living life, Life is living me. And the more I can relax into that, the better Life tends to get!