Space as Home (Part 1): Living Inside a Belief System

Space as Home (Part 1): Living Inside a Belief System

Most of us think we have beliefs. Perhaps more accurately, we live inside them.

Beliefs are not just opinions floating in the mind. They are the invisible architecture that shapes what we notice, what we dismiss, what we fear, what we desire, and what we think is possible. Beliefs influence how we interpret other people, how we read the world, and how we decide what matters. In this sense, a belief system is not abstract. It is a kind of internal space, a lived environment.

Spaciology begins here — the recognition that space is not a passive backdrop. Space (inner, relational, organizational, ecological) participates in shaping identity, belonging, and meaning. When I say we begin in space in Spaciology’s Manifesto, I am referring to something practical. Before we fix, before we ‘scale’, before we declare certainty, we are already living in a field of attention. This field shapes what we can see, and it shapes what we cannot see.

We do not simply think inside our beliefs. We move, relate, and choose inside them.


Why Internal Space Matters More Than We Admit

Internal space includes the landscape of memory, emotion, somatic cues, inherited thought patterns, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive. Your body is part of this. Your sensations are part of this. Your pace is part of this. This is why I treat self-inquiry as more than introspection. It is not a personality trait but a discipline: the practice of noticing assumptions, emotions, and conditioned responses before they become actions that feel inevitable.

It is tempting to treat beliefs as harmless private property. In reality, internal space leaks. It leaks into your relationships. It leaks into your parenting. It leaks into your work. It leaks into your ability to listen, your willingness to change, and your capacity to stay present when something is difficult.

If a person believes the world is basically unsafe, then speed, control, and certainty become virtues. If a person believes they are only valuable when they produce, rest becomes guilt. If a person believes conflict means abandonment, honesty becomes risky. We can call these mindsets, schemas, or conditioning. I call them rooms we live in, often without realizing we moved in.


Space As Home (Not As Comfort)

When I say space as home, I do not mean comfort. Home is not always comfortable. Home is where reality is met without pretending. Internal space becomes home when you can be present with what is true without rushing to anesthetize it, justify it, or convert it into a strategy.

In a culture that rewards performance and certainty, many of us learn to treat our internal world as a problem to manage rather than a space to inhabit. We become experts at narration and avoidance. We learn to sound coherent while staying disconnected from what we actually feel. Spaciology offers a different direction: not self-improvement as image management, but self-inquiry as honest contact with the spaces we live inside.


A Working Practice: The Three-Room Check

This is a simple practice you can do in under five minutes. It is intentionally plain, because durable change rarely begins with drama. It begins with attention.

  1. Name The Room You Are In.
    Complete this sentence: “Right now, the inner space I am living in is ________.”
    Examples: scarcity, anticipation, defensiveness, grief, hope, numbness, certainty.
  2. Identify The Belief Furnishing The Room.
    Ask: “What do I believe is true right now?” Try to make it a single sentence.
  3. Find The Body Signal.
    Ask: “Where do I feel this belief in my body?” Chest, throat, jaw, stomach, shoulders.

Now the crucial step: do not argue with what you find. Do not negotiate with it. Do not make it wrong. Just notice. In Spaciology terms, you are making space by slowing down long enough to see complexity rather than collapsing into reflex.


Why This Matters In A Post-Normal World

We are living amid accelerating complexity: ecological strain, social fragmentation, and the fatigue that comes from competing narratives about what is real. In this context, the solution is rarely a single answer. The deeper work is learning to live in internal space without turning fear into domination or confusion into collapse.

Many of our public failures are private failures scaled up: unexamined assumptions, unmanaged fear, and a belief that the only responsible posture is control. Spaciology is not an argument against action. It is an argument for a different kind of action, action that begins with honest contact with the inner conditions that shape what we call reality.

You do not outgrow your belief system by reading the right book. You outgrow it by seeing the room you are in, noticing what it costs, and practicing the slow dignity of choosing again.

This Is The First Home: the space within.

If you want the applied framework behind this, Space as Metaphor operationalizes Spaciology into teachable practices and explicitly connects internal assumptions to external realities.

About Spaciology

Spaciology is not abstract theory; rather, it is a practice you can feel.

  • Inside: Pause, breathe, notice.
  • Outside: Design rooms, rituals, and agendas that slow the spin and invite care.
  • Between us: Make dialogue a place where different truths can live together long enough to teach something.

Ultimately, leadership is the art of making space for what’s important (for everyone) and letting that clarity shape the next step. When we change the spaces from which we lead, our strategies change with them.

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Spaceship Earth

Spaceship Earth

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I woke up one day
on this spaceship called earth,
and I held on tight for what it’s worth,
you see,
there is this thing called gravity
that holds me
in place
on this molten rock
flying through space,
so I won’t be going anywhere anytime soon,
although I can gaze at the stars,
rainbows, and a moon,
snow in the winter,
and fireflies in June.
I can fall in love,
I can dream,
change my mind,
or hold my ground,
listen to the sound
of silence,
the silence in the sound
of not being heard,
the words we sometimes think
but do not say
when something isn’t okay,
like today,
with endless rules,
tools, and fools
selling their answers
from the back of their van,
telling us who can’t
and what can,
as if the mysteries of the universe
can be uncovered for a fee,
and that what it means to be me
is probably available for discovery
in ChatGPT.
Who do they think they are?
And what am I,
and why am I afraid
to cry in public
when I love the expression so much
and how it feels
to simply feel.
That’s real
to me,
and I won’t discover that
in ChatGPT,
or on TV.
That’s life,
and I’m a body
with hopes and dreams
of a boy not yet gone,
holding on
to the night before the dawn,
afraid of space,
the human race,
and anything that moves,
and I’m on a spaceship called earth.

About Spaciology

Spaciology is not abstract theory; rather, it is a practice you can feel.

  • Inside: Pause, breathe, notice.
  • Outside: Design rooms, rituals, and agendas that slow the spin and invite care.
  • Between us: Make dialogue a place where different truths can live together long enough to teach something.

Ultimately, leadership is the art of making space for what’s important (for everyone) and letting that clarity shape the next step. When we change the spaces from which we lead, our strategies change with them.

Spaciology Learning Commons

Want to go further? Join the Spaciology Learning Commons.

Membership gives you free access to community conversations, courses, introductory resources, and the complete Field Guide.

Stay in Touch

Spaciology Learning Commons

Want to go further? Join the Spaciology Learning Commons.

Membership gives you free access to community conversations, courses, introductory resources, and the complete Field Guide.

Dust in the Wind

Dust in the Wind

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There is nothing
real except the recognition
that real is what we feel
and not what we think
because to follow a thought,
even our own,
is to follow a ghost
and yet most
of us cling
to this thing,
this idea of what would be
and how we,
you and me,
would see
things differently
at a future date
in a place
where laughter must rule,
work is for the fool,
and tragedy a tool
in someone else’s tool box,
and we would dream
and row our boats,
merrily,
down a stream
to moments
that contain unbridled joy
and song,
heroes
and suns
that never set
if only we could let
ourselves
embrace
the certainty
of absolute truth
and the reality
that humanity
understands
grand plans
and the speed of light,
the mysteries of death
and the dark night
of the soul
within the body
of life
that holds us
as we breathe
and one day die
in the desert
that is space,
a place
without time
within which we chase
ourselves down dark alleys
past pubs and salons
where we offer comfort
to ourselves and one another
because there is no stream,
no dream
or cream
that can erase
the wrinkles of time
that wrap themselves
around our face,
creating space
for tears to hide
outside
as we age
inside the cage,
and yet if we look to see,
and not just to exist,
we can choose to explore
what it means to be or not to be
and resist
the urge
to explain to others
what things mean
and how to experience the mystery
and the tragedy
that is life,
because what we think is real
is merely a thought
that got caught,
and so we if can let that idea go
and step back from what we think we know,
we create more choices,
more spaces,
more voices
in the bittersweet symphony
of life
on a sphere
in a galaxy
too far
and too near,
so enigmatic
and dear,
neither there nor here,
spinning within
and without
year after year
until we are
dust in the wind

About Spaciology

Spaciology is not abstract theory; rather, it is a practice you can feel.

  • Inside: Pause, breathe, notice.
  • Outside: Design rooms, rituals, and agendas that slow the spin and invite care.
  • Between us: Make dialogue a place where different truths can live together long enough to teach something.

Ultimately, leadership is the art of making space for what’s important (for everyone) and letting that clarity shape the next step. When we change the spaces from which we lead, our strategies change with them.

Spaciology Learning Commons

Want to go further? Join the Spaciology Learning Commons.

Membership gives you free access to community conversations, courses, introductory resources, and the complete Field Guide.

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Spaciology Learning Commons

Want to go further? Join the Spaciology Learning Commons.

Membership gives you free access to community conversations, courses, introductory resources, and the complete Field Guide.

Stepping Off the Train: Beyond Right and Wrong

Stepping Off the Train: Beyond Right and Wrong

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In these divisive times, it feels somewhat comfortable to gravitate toward an existing train of thought. This train goes left, and this one right.

Invariably, some of us shout at those who ride what we may perceive as the “wrong” train. Who determines the ‘wrongness’ of a particular train of thought? Who determines if it is “right?” Are not concepts of wrong or right arbitrary at best, catastrophic and limiting at worst?

Freedom

Recently, I came across a passage in Meeting Life by Krishnamurti. In it, he suggests that to be “ really revolutionary” means “non-acceptance of any pattern set by oneself or another, no sense of conformity, nor accepting any sort of authority, which means freedom from fear” (1991, p. 118).

Out of this freedom, we can “live a totally different kind of life” (p. 118-119). This is not a life established by those who have come before us nor a life experienced in the abstract.

No, life is not an abstraction nor can its meaning be captured in “brilliant articles” by “clever men” (p. 124). So what is life about?

Krishnamurti says it is about love, but do any of us see this love today? We do not love. “We have become brutal, callous, indifferent, ruthless. Without love you can solve nothing” (p. 125).

Krishnamurti uttered these words more than 50 years ago, yet their relevance to today cannot be overstated. Why don’t we love? This is the question.

Why don’t we love sunsets and shooting stars? Why don’t we love each other, especially the ones who grace our lives with their presence?

It is remarkably easy to allow oneself to drift into what is known. When something is known, something is lost.

Rediscovering the Mystery

Perhaps freedom from the known means rediscovering the mystery and the mysteries present in the experience of everyday life. A bowl of oatmeal with brown sugar and raisins. A piece of homemade bread with melted butter and orange marmalade. A single solitary butterfly wafting through the air on a Saturday morning in June just before 9 AM.

I also love trains, regardless of the direction they may travel, because ultimately they all return to the same station. Who runs this station?

Perhaps, this station is not a station at all. Perhaps, it is simply an open space, boundless, without tracks or timetables, through which we pass.

What if the real journey is not about choosing the right train but stepping off entirely? What if love is not found in the direction we take, but in the stillness between arrivals and departures?

Perhaps freedom is not about the next destination but rather about looking very deeply—past the station lights, past the timetables, past the tracks—into the infinite self.

About Spaciology

Spaciology is not abstract theory; rather, it is a practice you can feel.

  • Inside: Pause, breathe, notice.
  • Outside: Design rooms, rituals, and agendas that slow the spin and invite care.
  • Between us: Make dialogue a place where different truths can live together long enough to teach something.

Ultimately, leadership is the art of making space for what’s important (for everyone) and letting that clarity shape the next step. When we change the spaces from which we lead, our strategies change with them.

Spaciology Learning Commons

Want to go further? Join the Spaciology Learning Commons.

Membership gives you free access to community conversations, courses, introductory resources, and the complete Field Guide.

Stay in Touch

Spaciology Learning Commons

Want to go further? Join the Spaciology Learning Commons.

Membership gives you free access to community conversations, courses, introductory resources, and the complete Field Guide.