The Art of Conscious creation.

Summary of The Depths of Manifestation: The Art of Conscious Creation

The Depths of Manifestation explores how human beings can deliberately shape their reality by aligning thoughts, emotions, and actions with a clear, focused intention. It presents manifestation not as wishful thinking, but as a disciplined practice rooted in awareness, energy alignment, and inner transformation.

The book emphasizes that true creation begins within — by mastering your beliefs, becoming conscious of your inner dialogue, and syncing your desires with universal flow (often referred to as the quantum field, spirit, or source). Drawing from metaphysics, Eastern philosophy, and neuroscience, it teaches that we attract what we are, not just what we want.

Key principles include:

  • Clarity of intention: Know exactly what you wish to manifest.
  • Emotional alignment: Feel as if your desire is already real.
  • Letting go: Trust the process without obsession or fear.
  • Action with flow: Take inspired steps while staying open to change.
  • Inner congruence: Heal resistance, limiting beliefs, and doubts.

Ultimately, the book serves as both a spiritual guide and a practical framework for becoming a conscious co-creator of your life — not through control, but through alignment, presence, and surrender to higher intelligence.

Would you like a visual summary or infographic version as well?

Perfect Synchrony of Inner and Life helm.

In terrific wild, when thunder hears,

A man must stand, though the ocean pours,

Like a captain ship through spinning tides,

He grips the helm, with soul as guide.

Steel in spirit, calm in flame,

He charts his course, though non acclaim,

Not every storm he dares defy,

But rides the wind, and let someone fly.

While a sea obeys no rigid rule,

It dances wild, yet deep and cool,

has boundaries but breaks it at its roar,

yet a flawless life at its core.

Business Case Study (Chemical Manufacturer)

Our client is a chemical manufacturing and selling company. Recently sales have dropped massively because of new waste disposal regulations, also market research has found industry will only grow at 3% in next 10 years client wants to diversify, while keeping his current business intact, because they want to grow at a faster rate, what is the advice that you will give to him.

What is Guestimate ?

Calculate the total cost of kites purchased during sankranthi in Ahmedabad ?

To estimate the total cost of kites purchased during Sankranti in Ahmedabad, let’s break it down using a guesstimate approach.

Step 1: Estimate the number of people who buy kites

  • Ahmedabad has a population of around 8 million.
  • Not everyone buys kites, but assuming 40% of the population participates, that’s: 8,000,000×0.4=3,200,000 (people buying kites)8,000,000 \times 0.4 = 3,200,000 \text{ (people buying kites)}8,000,000×0.4=3,200,000 (people buying kites)

Step 2: Estimate the number of kites per person

  • On average, a person may buy 10 kites (some for themselves and some for family/friends). 3,200,000×10=32,000,000 (kites bought)3,200,000 \times 10 = 32,000,000 \text{ (kites bought)}3,200,000×10=32,000,000 (kites bought)

Step 3: Estimate the average cost per kite

  • Kites vary in price, but an average kite costs around ₹10. 32,000,000×10=₹320,000,00032,000,000 \times 10 = ₹320,000,00032,000,000×10=₹320,000,000 That’s ₹320 crore.

Step 4: Factor in premium kites and bulk purchases

Some people buy designer or large kites costing ₹50-₹200. Let’s assume 10% of purchases are such kites, with an average price of ₹100. 3,200,000×1×100=₹320,000,0003,200,000 \times 1 \times 100 = ₹320,000,0003,200,000×1×100=₹320,000,000 Adding this to the basic kites: ₹320,000,000+₹320,000,000=₹640,000,000₹320,000,000 + ₹320,000,000 = ₹640,000,000₹320,000,000+₹320,000,000=₹640,000,000 Final Estimate: ₹640 crore (~$77 million) spent on kites in Ahmedabad during Sankranti.

Locus of Control

If you want to have useful thoughts, here’s a rule of thumb: Only think about
things you can control. That automatically eliminates about 99% of your
thoughts because there’s very little you control in life.

Only focus on what you control. Things like your:
Desires
Actions

Words
Intentions
What’s a useless thought? Anything out of your control and without a useful
purpose. Do you ever think about the past? That’s the perfect example of a
random thought that lacks a purpose, unless you’re reflecting on a past
decision or mistake you made. In the case of reflection, you’re doing
something useful. But other than that, every thought about the past serves no
purpose. From that point of view, it’s useless.
Ever fantasize about the future? That’s also useless. I’ve discovered two main
types of useful thoughts:

  1. Thinking about how you can solve problems. A problem is just an
    unanswered question. Put your brain to use and think about how you
    can solve problems. There are a lot of those on this earth.
  2. Understanding knowledge. That means this: Try to internalize
    knowledge and think about how you can use that knowledge to
    improve your life, career, work, relationships, etc.
    That’s it. You can ignore every other thought. If you’re constantly thinking
    without a useful purpose, it’s because you haven’t’ trained your mind yet.
    You have to get out of your head. If not, you’ll go mental. Everyone will. No
    exception.
    Ask yourself: “Is that worth it?”
    Do you really want to waste your time, energy, and life on useless thinking?
    You and I both know the answer to that. Commit to stop thinking about
    useless things. Start taking control of your mind. All that worrying about
    the past and the future is not going to help you. It never did. And it never
    will.

A (VERY) BRIEF HISTORY OF THINKING ( from darious foroux )

Thoughts are important. But not all thoughts are equal. The quality of your
thoughts matters the most. Roman Emperor and Stoic philosopher, Marcus
Aurelius said it best: “The universe is change; our life is what our thoughts
make it.”
A quick look at our surroundings shows us that life is changing faster than
ever. Jobs disappear, smartphones turn you into a zombie, education costs
you thousands, the cost of living increases rapidly, salaries don’t, you have
less time for yourself, and so on. Life changes so fast that it seems like you
wake up in a new world every day! What do your thoughts make of that? If
you’re anything like me, these developments cause a lot of thinking, aka
worrying and uncertainty. How do I survive? How do I adapt my business to
changing markets? How do I advance my career? How do I not lose my
mind? Mastering your thoughts is challenging.
The desire to master our thoughts is as old as modern civilization. Ever since
the fifth century BC, philosophers from all ages and regions agree on one
thing: The human mind is an instrument that solves problems. And many
philosophers argue that the quality of your thoughts determine the quality of
your life. From Confucius to Socrates to Descartes to William James, they all
talk about their method of thinking—a way to view the world.
Most of us know the Socratic method of questioning everything, even
yourself. “I know one thing: That I know nothing,” is what Socrates famously
told the Oracle of Delphi when Socrates was declared the wisest man on
earth. The fact that he thinks that he knows nothing makes him wise. That’s a
way of thinking.

French philosopher René Descartes, who lived in the 17

th century, took it one
step further. He questioned everything in life, even his own existence.
Because how do you know you’re not dreaming or living in The Matrix?
That’s why he famously said: “Cogito ergo sum.” Popularly translated to, “I
think, therefore I am.” Descartes concluded that he must exist because he’s
able to think.
No matter how crazy your thoughts are, it’s safe to say that you do exist. So
why not make your existence a little more practical, lighthearted, fun, and
useful?
Have you ever observed or written down your thoughts? I challenge you, try
it for a day. Every two hours or so, sit down and write about what you’re
thinking at that very moment. Just don’t get scared of yourself. Most of our
thoughts make no sense at all. We’re conflicted as a species. Descartes also
reviewed his own thoughts and found many contradictions. His most
important idea is that we should question the source of our beliefs, not the
belief itself. Because most of our beliefs are based on our or other people’s
perception.
How many of your ideas are based on what others have told you? Or based
on your first thoughts or assumptions? At the core of thinking lies our ability
to separate the truth from falsehood. What is true, what is false?
One way to look at that question is to take a pragmatic perspective. William
James describes the idea of pragmatism as follows: “The attitude of looking
away from first things, principles, ‘categories,’ supposed necessities; and of
looking towards last things, fruits, consequences, facts.” Thoughts should
serve a useful purpose. If they don’t, they’re useless. That’s straight
thinking.

Pragmatism is a method of thinking, not a solution. In fact, all thinking is a
method. Your thoughts serve as an instrument. But it’s a conflicting
instrument that’s very hard to use. Henry Ford said it best: “Thinking is the
hardest work there is, which is probably the reason why so few engage in it.”
Thinking is not only hard—it’s the single most important thing in life.
Remember: The quality of our thoughts determines the quality of our lives.
And our decisions are a result of our thoughts.

Setting Up FastAPI: A Beginner’s Guide

FastAPI is a modern, high-performance web framework for building APIs with Python. Here’s how you can get started quickly!

Step 1: Install FastAPI and Uvicorn

FastAPI is the web framework, and Uvicorn is the ASGI server used to run FastAPI applications.

Open your terminal or command prompt and run the following commands:

python -m pip install fastapi
pip install uvicorn

This will install FastAPI and Uvicorn on your system.

Step 2: Create Your First FastAPI Application

Create a Python file named myapi.py and add the following code:

from fastapi import FastAPI, Path
from typing import Optional

app = FastAPI()

students = {
    1: {
        “name”: “john”,
        “age”: 17,
        “class”: “year 12”
    }
}

@app.get(“/”)
def index():
    return {“name”: “First Data”}

@app.get(“/get-student/{student_id}”)
def get_student(student_id: int = Path(…, description=”The ID of the student you want to view”, gt = 0, lt = 3)):
    return students.get(student_id, {“error”: “Student not found”})

@app.get(“/get-by-name/{student_id}”)
def get_student(*, student_id: int, name : Optional[str] = None, test : int):
    for student_id in students:
        if students[student_id][“name”] == name:
            return students[student_id]
    return {“Data”: “Not found”}    

This code creates a FastAPI app with a single route (/) that returns a JSON response with the message "Welcome to FastAPI!".

Step 3: Run Your FastAPI Application

Once your app is ready, you can run it using Uvicorn.

Run the following command in your terminal:

uvicorn myapi:app –reload

  • myapi:app tells Uvicorn to look for the app object in the myapi.py file.
  • --reload enables auto-reloading, so your server will automatically restart whenever you make changes to the code.

After running this command, Uvicorn will start the server, and your FastAPI application will be available at http://127.0.0.1:8000/.

Step 4: Test Your API

Open your browser and go to http://127.0.0.1:8000/. You should see the JSON response:

{
“name”: “First Data”
}

You can also explore FastAPI’s built-in interactive API documentation by visiting:

  • Swagger UI: http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs
  • Redoc UI: http://127.0.0.1:8000/redoc

Conclusion

That’s it! 🎉 You’ve successfully set up a basic FastAPI application. With just a few commands, you’re ready to start building APIs quickly and efficiently.

Stay tuned for more advanced topics in future posts!