Anima et Ignis

Anima et Ignis Where science meets psyche; mysticism meets method. Where masks fall, substance remains. Inner work rooted in truth, discipline, lived experience. No pretence.

No hollow positivity. Only what helps, heals, strengthens, and brings inner peace ✊

When the trigger hits; your nervous system shifts into survival mode before your conscious mind can catch up. That spike...
29/04/2026

When the trigger hits; your nervous system shifts into survival mode before your conscious mind can catch up. That spike of adrenaline is just a biological alarm; it is not a command to act.

Viktor Frankl identified the space between stimulus and response as the ultimate point of human freedom. Most people ignore it, letting their instincts override their intent. But in that gap; you move from reflex to choice.

BWRT operates exactly here. It is not about affirmations or white-knuckling through a reaction; it is about disrupting the neurological loop at the point where the trigger begins. It is a clinical precision designed to bypass the automatic fight or flight response.

Every time I work with a client using BWRT, the speed is staggering. It is shockingly powerful; the kind of rapid change that feels like a miracle simply because we are so used to suffering for years in conventional therapy. If you have not looked into it yet, do yourself a favour and start.

Stop letting outdated beliefs dictate your life. Your current "problems" were originally survival strategies; they were solutions once. But if they no longer serve you, they must be replaced. They will not just evaporate on their own.

If you are ready to stop operating on autopilot, let us see if we can rewire that loop. I am opening a limited number of spots for a free introduction to BWRT. Like or comment below, and I will reach out to see if it is a fit.

24/04/2026

21/04/2026
What do religion, psychology, spiritual discipline and esoteric practice have in common?The Work Within: Inner transform...
19/04/2026

What do religion, psychology, spiritual discipline and esoteric practice have in common?

The Work Within: Inner transformation.

Their languages differ. Their methods differ. Their metaphysics differ. But again and again they return to the same battlefield; awareness, conscience, desire, suffering, meaning, and the difficult labour of becoming less divided within oneself.

Nature or nurture.

What dictates whether one turns cruel while another is willing to suffer, even die, for what is right? This question is older than psychology and older than theology in their formal sense. It has haunted philosophers, mystics, lawmakers, and ordinary people for centuries.

Perhaps the most honest answer is that human beings are shaped by both inheritance and injury; by temperament and by experience. In the vast permutability of nature, some may indeed be born with a darker inclination or a colder moral instinct, while others abandon the striving toward good through punishment, humiliation, disappointment, cruelty, and the slow corrosion brought on by life’s unfairness.

And let us be honest; becoming evil is easy. All it takes is to give up morals, compassion, and responsibility. Like riding a bicycle down a hill, it requires very little effort. One does not need discipline to descend. One only needs to stop resisting gravity.

Becoming a better person, by contrast, is an aspiration. For some, that impulse seems present from the beginning; almost instinctive, as though conscience burns brightly and refuses to be silenced. For others, it must be found, recovered, and fought for through hardship and trial; chosen again and again against everything within and around them that argues for shortcuts, deception, self deceit, and surrender to evil. And as difficult as that task already is, many make it harder still by ignoring the signs, refusing help, and brushing aside the very tools that might keep them upright; whether therapy, books, faith, honest counsel, or the example of someone who suffered without allowing suffering to rot them from within. Struggle may be inevitable; needless struggle is often a matter of pride.

This is precisely why so many traditions place such weight on awareness; on inner transformation; on conscious union between what one knows, what one feels, and how one lives. Whether one calls it repentance, awakening, metanoia, integration, remembrance, or alignment with the divine, the movement is similar; from fragmentation toward wholeness.

“The inner world is guided by moral compass. Use it or lose it”

Not because quantum mechanics says “where attention goes, energy flows”; it does not. And while I occasionally borrow that phrase for its neat poetic relevance, the truth beneath the cliché is still worth keeping. What we repeatedly attend to does shape us. Repeated thoughts become patterns; patterns become habits; habits harden into character.

As we Slavs say “habit is an iron shirt. Once it is on, it is hard to take off.”

So what does that mean in ordinary life?

It means that if we repeatedly ignore conscience, dull remorse, rationalise betrayal, and silence the parts of us that register “this is beneath me,” we do not become free; we become less perceptive. The inner warning system does not vanish; it goes quiet. And what goes quiet in consciousness often returns through other doors; anxiety, emptiness, compulsive distraction, irritability, deadened joy, fractured self respect. That is not mystical punishment. It is one of the prices of inner contradiction.

This must still be handled with care. Depression is not simply buried guilt. Addiction is not simply moral failure. Human suffering is broader, harsher, and often medically complex. Clinical depression cannot be cured by cheerful slogans, forced gratitude, or the shallow theatre of “good vibes only.” That kind of toxic positivity does not heal; it trivialises pain and shames the sufferer for not recovering fast enough.

“Remember - seeking help is an act of bravery. Chose wisely who’s counsel you seek.”

To name that pattern matters. And that itself reveals something important; language is not decoration. Language is a tool of sight.

If you want to read it, you first have to see it.

And very often, to see it properly, you have to name it properly.

That is why vocabulary matters. Awareness sharpens when language sharpens. The more precisely we can name a behaviour, a tactic, or a state of mind, the less power it has to move unseen. Words such as gaslighting, manipulation, projection, or moral grandstanding are useful not because they are fashionable, but because they help cut through confusion. Without that precision, people can hide behind vagueness, flood the room with word salad, distort what happened, and then accuse the other person of overreacting. Without words, the mind senses something is wrong but struggles to catch it cleanly.

Language, then, is not merely how we describe reality; it is one of the ways reality becomes visible to us.

This is one reason English can sometimes feel unusually flexible. It borrows, adapts, and turns living experience into precise shorthand. It often allows behaviours to be named in a compact, socially usable form. Other languages may carry beauty, depth, and power in different ways, but where precise everyday naming is missing, certain behaviours are harder to isolate, harder to challenge, and easier to normalise. That does not make one language superior in some absolute sense, but it does remind us that vocabulary shapes attention, and attention shapes response.

Even something as simple as the word love reveals this. In English, love can function as noun and verb. One can feel love, but one can also love; actively, presently, as a mode of conduct, without the phrase being automatically confined to romantic intensity or burdened by the immediate stigma of romantic intimacy. In Czech, by contrast, the distinction can feel sharper. Láska is the noun; love as a thing, a state, a presence. But the verb, milovat, often carries greater emotional weight in direct speech; more intimate, more serious, more romantically marked. So people may hesitate to say miluji tě in ordinary life, not because Czech lacks a verb for love, but because the verb can sound more consequential than its English counterpart. And since one cannot simply say “I ‘láska’ you,” the language offers less casual room for love as an everyday verbal act. Other Slavic languages handle this differently; for example, Serbo Croatian uses voljeti or voleti, a broader verb that can cover both love and like. That subtle difference matters. It affects what feels natural to say, and therefore, at times, what feels natural to show.

This returns us to the opening premise. The commonality of religion, psychology, and esoteric traditions is not that they all say the same thing. They do not. It is that they repeatedly direct human beings inward; toward examination, purification, recollection, repentance, integration, awakening, or discipline.

From the Hermetic writings attributed to Hermes Trismegistus, to the Delphic injunction to know thyself, through the teachings of Jesus, to modern depth psychology, one theme persists; the human problem is not solved by rearranging externals alone. Outer change matters; of course it does. A better job, a safer home, a decent partner, proper rest, fair pay, meaningful work; these are not illusions. But none of them can permanently repair a person who is at war with themselves.

As Christ says in Luke 17:21, “the kingdom of God is within you”; or, in other translations, “is among you.” The distinction is debated, but the point remains; the decisive struggle is closer than we think.

So let me say one thing plainly.

Every serious effort to become a better human being is worth the struggle.

“No pain - No gain”

And here lies an essential point; when we consciously spend our energy on becoming better, we are no longer merely reacting to life, but taking part in our own formation. We are awakening that part of us which is older than life.

Here too modern psychotherapy, at its best, bridges part of the gap between religion and esotericism. It offers guidance in a cleaner, scientifically rooted environment.
Like a beacon, it helps guide a person through treacherous waters and hidden reefs; and where they struggle to move forward, it places supports in their hands. Yet even here, responsibility remains. It is up to the person whether they use those supports to move toward the light, or to walk over others while hiding behind borrowed wisdom instead of facing themselves head on.

Many of us make the same mistake; we rely too much on chance, mood, and circumstance to govern character. But decline rarely arrives as a grand event. It begins slowly, quietly, almost invisibly. First in thought. Then in permission. Then in action. Character is trained long before it is tested.

An unfaithful person will often imagine the affair long before it happens. A bitter person rehearses the grievance before the outburst. A coward usually surrenders inwardly before retreat becomes visible to others. What we think shapes us more profoundly than many care to admit. It is precisely these small things; the private rehearsals, the silent permissions, the thoughts we entertain without resistance; that begin shaping the actions that later seem sudden.

If you have ever watched a magician steer someone toward naming the very card they wanted, you already understand the principle. They are not reading minds. They are arranging perception. One card appears more often than the others; not so often that the conscious mind flags it, but often enough for the subconscious to register the pattern. Then the person names the ace of spades believing they arrived there freely, unaware that the choice was quietly primed before it was consciously made. The mind is suggestible in ways pride rarely likes to admit.

And this is where modern therapy practice can deliver most - it studies those relationships between conscious and subconscious and from those findings it assembles tools and guidelines that fast track one’s progress (even here critical lens is required - not all therapists are the same - research is always advisable).

And so are we.

What we place before ourselves repeatedly; images, ideas, fantasies, resentments, excuses; does not merely pass through us untouched. It leaves traces. It arranges preference. It makes some choices feel more natural than others. Free will is a fascinating subject in its own right; we can leave that for another time. But whatever freedom is, it is clearly influenced by what we feed, repeat, and allow to linger in the inner room.

This is why small betrayals matter. This is why rationalisation is dangerous. This is why complacency is crime. The moment we begin arguing with ourselves in defence of what we already know is beneath us, we have usually lost the battle. Not because all self questioning is bad; on the contrary, honest examination is necessary. But there is a difference between reflection and inner litigation. Reflection seeks truth. Inner litigation seeks permission.

This is where choosing one’s battles wisely becomes practical rather than poetic.

Not every feeling deserves obedience.
Not every thought deserves a hearing.
Not every impulse deserves negotiation.

A wise person learns to recognise which inner conflicts are worth engaging and which should be cut off early. If you know that resentment grows stronger the longer you rehearse it, do not build it a throne. If you know that temptation becomes eloquent once entertained, do not invite it to debate. If you know that your weaker self always arrives disguised as comfort, urgency, or entitlement, learn that voice well enough to interrupt it before it settles in.

Better to stop early. Better to tell the truth early. Better to pay the smaller price while it is still small.

Choose your battles wisely. Choose the hill you are willing to die on. Name the cost of freedom before life names it for you. And where your core value is being violated; do not negotiate against your own soul. A compromise may win you a moment. It may also leave a residue that follows you for years.

When Jesus was being crucified, the line is given as; “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” Whatever one’s theology, this is not passivity. It is a statement of astonishing consciousness under extremity; an unwillingness to let cruelty dictate the final shape of the self.

That level of consciousness is not cheaply obtained. Whether one speaks in terms of grace, practice, virtue, metanoia, individuation, or disciplined awareness, the task remains severe. It takes courage to stop lying to oneself. It takes strength to face one’s envy, vanity, cowardice, and hunger for applause. It takes dedication to replace compulsion with character.

But this is the work.

Not performance. Not slogans. Not scented fog masquerading as wisdom.

The real work is quieter; to become less ruled by impulse, less fragmented by fear, less available for corruption, and more capable of truth, mercy, restraint, and clear sight. That fight is mostly invisible. Few will applaud it. Some days no one will know it is happening at all.

Lead it anyway.

Be brave in the place where pretence dies. Hold the line where it matters. Refuse the bargain that costs you your centre. What is highest in a human being is rarely built by spectacle; it is built by repeated acts of awareness, honesty, and sacrifice.

Be light with yourself; but do not be lax.
Be merciful; but not evasive.
Be inwardly exacting; and outwardly human.

Anima et Ignis
April 2026

The voice in us that judges others is the root of evil.Sounds a bit emo; like staring into the rain while your hair dye ...
22/03/2026

The voice in us that judges others is the root of evil.

Sounds a bit emo; like staring into the rain while your hair dye quietly gives up… like Rudy Giuliani on a hot day.

And yet; watch that voice for a day. Notice what it does, quietly in the background, shaping everything from your mood to how you see the world.

This is what Buddhists call Maya.

Not illusion as fantasy; illusion as misperception.
A lens mistaken for reality.

Which is why they say there is no real spiritual practice; only the gradual stepping out of self deception.

So, how do we tell the difference between what is real and what is assumed?

The real rarely asks for explanation. The assumed cannot stop explaining itself.

As for the process…

Start with the one that puts the filter on and calls it clarity; our inner judge.

It is quick. Certain. Uninvited.
It decides before it sees. It labels before it understands. It turns passing moments into verdicts; no jury, no evidence, no appeal.

We all have it.
The ones who deny it have simply outsourced their thinking to it and adopted it as part of their chimeric personality.

The fascinating part is that it always happens with our consent; subtle, barely perceptible, yet like anything in the mental realm, it requires our participation.

Watch it closely.

How fast it assigns intent.
How easily it reduces a person to a sentence.
How confidently it gets it wrong.

That is the tell.

Outward; immediate, absolute.
Inward; quietly negotiated.

In therapy, we call this resolving internal conflict through cognitive dissonance; a neat way the mind keeps its story intact.

The smoker knows it kills; then edits the ending.
“I’ve got good genes.”
“I’ll quit soon.”
“It won’t happen to me.”

Same facts.
Different story.

We call it clarity.
It is bias with a firm handshake.

And then we wonder why things feel tight. Why conversations snap. Why life pushes back.

Of course it does.

A mind that hands out verdicts all day rarely notices it is also the defendant.

And it does not stop with others. As if the voice grows bold enough to claim a part of us.

Then it turns inward. Same speed. Same certainty.

Now it is your own judge; and suddenly the sentencing guidelines get… darker.

This is where people split when it comes to mental health and therapy.

You cannot maintain two standards for the same thing; you cannot remove one while conforming to the other.

This creates dissonance within us; it can either be faced directly and resolved, or divided into smaller justifications that only deepen the confusion.

When we avoid being brutally honest with ourselves, we use therapy as a crutch.
Better language. Cleaner narratives. Same behaviour.

That is not growth. That is PR. The head thinks it is winning; the heart aches; the soul yearns. And we are left wondering why it does not work; why the voice keeps sabotaging us.

Therapy is not here to agree with you.
It is here to interrupt the part of us that hides in plain sight; that demands control while shunning responsibility.

Therapy does not polish the story.
It dismantles it where it does not hold; across the whole being, not just the head.

No crutches for patterns we refuse to question. No shifting of responsibility because we refuse to acknowledge the active part we play.

And this is why therapy is for the brave.

Not because it is dramatic.
Because it removes your favourite excuses and leaves you alone with what is actually there.

No applause. No costume. Just you; without the commentary.

Strip the label and it becomes simple.

Observation aka mindfulness.

Seeing the moment before the judgement lands.
Noticing the urge to conclude.
Feeling the tightening; and not obeying it like an order.

When the inner judge speaks, pause and ask: “Interesting… who or what are you?”

Silence is a good sign.
If an answer comes back, notice it; you are now in a made up conversation, rooted in something that is not you. Your energy is being taken away from you with your consent.

Do not argue with it. You can never win the argument. Instead -
Step back.

If this feels difficult, look into guided mindfulness meditation; learning not to engage with thoughts is how you begin to take hold of the reins of your mind.

That is where it shifts.

You can start anywhere.

Waiting for a coffee, washing your hands, walking, driving…

A few minutes noticing your breath.
Catching one reaction and cutting it short before it turns into a story.

And if you want structure; here are a few techniques used in therapy; practical, direct, immediately usable.



Future pacing

Rehearse what is coming; deliberately, with the outcome you want.

Example; a conversation you have been avoiding.
See it as you want it to go. Hear your tone steady. Feel your posture grounded.

You are not guessing; you are priming the mind toward the outcome you seek.



Parts

You are not one voice; stop pretending.

Example; one part wants progress; another wants comfort.
Both have a reason.

Ask what each is trying to protect.
When seen clearly, the tension loses its grip.



Miracle question

Define what better actually looks like.

Example; you wake up and the problem is gone.

What is the first small sign?
You move without hesitation.
You respond without overthinking.

Now you have direction; something observable, not abstract.



Reframing

Change the meaning; not the facts.

Example; heart racing before speaking.
Call it anxiety; you shrink.
Call it readiness; you step in.

You train the interpretation; the body follows.



Grounding

Return to what is real.

Feet on the floor. Breath moving.
Name what is in front of you.

You bring attention out of the story and back into the present.



Implementation

Decide in advance.

If I feel the urge to avoid; I act.
Small. Immediate.

You remove negotiation from the moment.



And there are methods that work even faster.

BWRT works at the level before conscious awareness; interrupting the pattern before the emotion fully forms, before the familiar reaction takes over.
Not after the storm; before it gathers.



And language matters.

With words we gain definition.
With labels we navigate.

• The map is not the territory
• Problems used to be solutions
• Name it to tame it
• You are not your thoughts
• Feelings are real; not always reliable
• Regulation before insight

Simple. Useful. Enough.

Most people are not stuck because change is impossible; they are stuck because the same pattern runs, unchecked, on repeat.

And it often begins with judgement; fast, certain, unexamined.

See it; and the grip loosens.

Not completely.
But enough.

Step by step; you are getting better and better.

If you are unsure where to start; reach out.
Based on what you want to change, the path differs.
CBT, hypnotherapy, trauma-focused work such as EMDR or EFT; knowing where to go matters as much as going.

We move faster when we stop pretending we do not need help.

New Year, Same You (Good.)So, have you done it yet?Started your new routine? Written your list?Thrown out the wine, boug...
11/01/2026

New Year, Same You (Good.)

So, have you done it yet?
Started your new routine? Written your list?
Thrown out the wine, bought the yoga mat, said something vague about “alignment” on social media?

No judgment.
It’s a tradition by now.
The yearly self-upgrade. Version 2.0. A better you, with cleaner habits and no fear.

Maybe this time it works.
But if it doesn’t, that doesn’t mean you’re broken.
It just means you started from the wrong place.

We fail when we begin with fiction, not with truth.

You wouldn’t knit a jumper for a creature you’ve never seen.
So why build a life for a version of you that only exists in theory?

Start here: acknowledge what is.
Not what should be.
Not what you wish you were.
Just what you are.

Then add gratitude. Quietly. No one has to see it.
Not as decoration, as perspective.

Then step one:
Just turn up.
Don’t optimise it. Don’t overthink it.
Whatever your plan is, just show up to the thing.

If it’s writing, open the document.
If it’s fitness, just go to the gym.
Loiter around with a water bottle in your hand and a sweat face.
No one needs to know it came from tying your shoelaces.

Play the system that’s designed to play you.
Even if you do absolutely nothing while you’re there, turn up again tomorrow.

This, my friend, is the path of a warrior.
The path of least resistance.

That’s where it starts. Not with intensity. With consistency.
Not because it looks good, or feels profound.
Because repetition creates reality.

You don’t need to fly.
You don’t even need to move fast.

You just need to stop running away from yourself.

Grow feathers first.

Every now and then, create a space just for yourself.
One without noise or performance.
Sit alone. In silence. Undisturbed.

And when you do, invite your fears to sit by the fire with you.
Not to talk. Not to fix.
Just offer them a hug.
Say it, “I give you my love, come to me.”
And be amazed at what happens next.

Problems used to be solutions.
They protected you.
They kept you small so you could stay safe.

But the world changed.
And now, you are the new solution. Realise this and you are free.

And always - be true to yourself - this is the most radical thing you can do ✊

If I could leave only one message, it would be this.Your life is not a mistake.Your struggle is not proof of failure.It ...
21/12/2025

If I could leave only one message, it would be this.

Your life is not a mistake.
Your struggle is not proof of failure.
It is proof that you are alive in a world that asks much
and explains little.

Most of what hurts in you was formed before you had language for it.
Old patterns, old fears, old agreements
still echoing through a body that is trying to protect you.
There is nothing wrong with you.
You adapted.
You survived.
Now you are allowed to outgrow what once kept you safe.

Every person carries two selves.
The one shaped by the past
and the one waiting quietly beneath it.
Call it soul, call it atman, call it the observer,
call it the one who never leaves even when you do.
It is older than your wounds and softer than your fear
and it waits for your attention like a child left in the dark
hoping someone will finally strike a match.

You do not heal by force.
You heal by noticing.
You heal by meeting yourself without turning away.
One breath at a time.
One honest moment at a time.
One small act of courage when everything in you wants to retreat.

Let yourself be human.
Let yourself be flawed, tired, messy, magnificent.
Let yourself be held by your own awareness
the way a parent would hold a trembling child
without judgement
without hurry.

The world will push you toward noise, comparison, distraction.
Return to yourself anyway.
Return to the body that never lied to you.
Return to the breath that has carried every version of you.
Return to the quiet place inside that cannot be damaged,
only forgotten.

And remember this.
You are not here to be perfect.
You are here to wake up.
Slowly.
Honestly.
Without shame.

If you forget everything else, then take this:
you are enough to begin
and beginning is everything.

Sit by the fire.
Come home to yourself.
We walk from here together

Anima et Ignis. Fiat lux in anima tua.

Most of us are harder on ourselves than life ever was.We push through days, override our limits, hide our fears and call...
07/12/2025

Most of us are harder on ourselves than life ever was.
We push through days, override our limits, hide our fears and call it normal.
But strength is not in pretending.
Strength begins the moment you admit what every human quietly knows:
something in me needs my attention.
Not judgement. Just attention.

There is a part of us we tend to overlook; not because it is hidden,
but because it is honest and raw.
The thoughts we whisper when nobody is watching.
The patterns we repeat until they feel carved into fate.

Here is what sits beneath all the theories.
Whatever we practise in the dark becomes who we are in the light.
Neurons that fire together wire together, yes,
but the point is not the science.
The point is ownership.
We are the ones shaping the pathways we walk.

Most of our worst habits were once survival.
In therapy we say that problems used to be solutions.
An old Slavic idiom says that habit is an iron shirt.
Once it is on, good luck taking it off.
Those old agreements made by younger versions of us
keep running the script long after the danger passed
and the world around us changed.
There is no shame in this. It is simply human.
Noticing it means you are already outgrowing the old code.
Your body is asking for your attention.
Give it freely, even for a few minutes a day.

Here is the good news.
The mind is loyal to repetition.
Give it a new instruction and it follows.
Shift one small response and the whole pattern begins to move with it.

Fear spirals when we leave it untouched.
It softens the moment you observe it.
Not by fighting, but by saying:
I see you. I know you are hurting. Not me, not today.
I am here for you. Stay with me.
Let me hold you for a moment, and watch the fear soften in the presence of love.

So start small.
One breath you control.
One thought you stop feeding.
One quiet act that says:
I have no obligation to carry this old story.
It belonged to who I was, not who I am.

It all begins with one honest moment of attention.
That is how real change starts.
Quietly, steadily, without performance.
This is stoic love in motion; the kind that heals rather than hides.

You are here for a brief moment,yet the light in you is older than the sun
27/11/2025

You are here for a brief moment,
yet the light in you is older than the sun

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