MY UNIVERSITIES: VADIM ZELAND'S "REALITY TRANSURFING"

           In Vadim Zeland's teaching "Reality Transurfing," complex but important concepts are explained in a very simple and understandable language.

           The essence of Transurfing, in brief, is to consciously surf along favorable lines of your life, abandoning struggle and lowering importance. By steering and trusting your world to materialize the most favorable scenario of events in your life. It involves moving towards your ideal picture, while along the way, noticing and recording confirmations that everything is going as it should. All possible scenarios are already written in the Universe, you just need to choose and take what you like. What does it mean to choose, and how to do it? That's what Transurfing is all about.

            In Transurfing, there is a concept called pendulums - energetic formations that hook onto us to feed off our energy. These pendulums are usually destructive. They throw hooks, lures, to get us to give away as much of our energy as possible. This can be resisted by developing mindfulness over time - the ability to track situations when a pendulum wants to hook you.

            A good practice from Zeland that has helped me a lot and which I have been practicing for years is to recite a mantra about my relationship with My World aloud or to myself before sleep. The formulations can vary. For example: "My world takes care of me, it has prepared everything best for me. My world and I are going for a walk. My world and I are realizing my dream." The better you formulate the mantra about your relationship with your world, the better they are implemented in practice. Whatever happens to you, you need to stubbornly affirm your own, and little by little you will adjust to the prosperous line of life. Even if you stray onto another, you can return to where you need to be. An effective way: pretend everything is awesome. Yes, it sucks right now, but it's part of the plan, and it will steer me where I want to go. And then you spin the slide in your head. Zeland writes: there is no need to bother trying to imagine how exactly this scenario will be realized. The same thing was said by Norbekov: there is no need to imagine the path of movement towards the realization of your image. Because from above, it's clearer how to reach the goal better and simpler.

            I've been thinking about why the quite popular Transurfing, despite its simplicity, doesn't catch on and isn't practiced by the masses... I realized that it's precisely because of its simplicity. With Zeland, everything seems effortless. Immediately you think: oh, it can't be that simple. We're used to thinking that we need to strive, buy expensive courses, go through complex practices. To aspire to something, to achieve something. Zeland, on the other hand, says the opposite: there's no need to rush anywhere or achieve anything. Lower the importance, remove control, loosen the grip.