There Are No Ultimate Truths
One thing I keep noticing across psychology, spirituality, philosophy, and even science is this:
What we experience as “true” is inseparable from what we believe — both consciously and unconsciously.
And the most deeply held belief of all is rarely questioned:
“I don’t get to choose what I believe.”
That assumption feels like a fact, but it’s still a belief. And because it sits so deep, it quietly shapes perception, interpretation, behavior, and outcome without ever being examined.
This helps explain something interesting historically:
very different systems have produced real results for the people who believed in them.
Religion, meditation, therapy models, rituals, mindset frameworks — they didn’t work because they were universally or ultimately true. They worked because belief reorganized attention, meaning, and action in a coherent way.
Reality responded to coherence more than correctness.
What shapes experience most powerfully isn’t the beliefs we openly identify with — it’s the assumptions running underneath:
  • what we think is possible
  • what we think is fixed
  • what we think must be earned
  • what we think is out of reach
Those beliefs often go unnoticed precisely because they feel “obvious.”
For me, the real work isn’t adopting a better framework.
It’s becoming aware of the one already operating.
Because the moment a belief becomes visible, it becomes optional — not necessarily false, but no longer unconscious.
That shift alone can change how reality is experienced.
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Daragh Keogh
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There Are No Ultimate Truths
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