Truth





How do we explain truth and its understanding?

At first glance, truth seems simple — it’s answering a question correctly, doing what’s right, being honest. From the time we’re young, we’re taught to know the difference between truth and lie. As parents, we pass this same teaching to our children, hoping they’ll grow to understand that truth builds character and that lies carry consequences.




But truth doesn’t always arrive so clearly. Sometimes, truth hides itself — disguised as something else. You can live for years carrying what you believe to be truth, when in reality it’s a false truth, something you’ve learned to hold to survive. These hidden truths often begin in childhood, buried deep in the subconscious. For some, they stay buried forever. For others, life begins to uncover them through experiences, heartbreak, or self-reflection.




When that moment comes — when truth finally reveals itself — it can create deep conflict within. It challenges everything you’ve believed, every story you’ve told yourself about who you are. But that confrontation can also be transformative. Because to face truth is to face yourself.




It’s like looking into a mirror of the soul — the one place that cannot lie.

That reflection shows you your most authentic self, the one untouched by the world’s expectations, unshaped by other people’s opinions. The one that knows not only your truest self, but helps you understand your journey from where you've walked, and with that understanding, it becomes your lighted path in your journey ahead.




If our tendency in our past experiences in life were built on picking up traits from others, adapting only to fit in, and accept the “truths” society gives us. Over time, we may have lost sight of who we really are beneath it all. But when truth calls you inward, it’s an invitation to return to your beginning — to the self that existed before all the pretending.


And when your soul speaks, it will tell you the truth — the whole truth — and nothing but the truth—whether you feel ready or not.


Because truth isn’t meant to comfort; it’s meant to free you.


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Where Does Freedom Lie?