The World That Thinks It Is Solid
What if the world only appears solid because the mind has learned to see it that way?
For thousands of years, yogis, mystics, and seers have spoken of extraordinary ways of knowing - moments when distance collapses, intuition becomes precise, and awareness reaches beyond the body. These experiences were called siddhis, but they were never meant to be miracles. They were signs that consciousness itself is not bound by space.
In this first volume of The Physics of Siddhis, TSPRavshiva takes the reader on a journey into the hidden field beneath everyday perception - where knowing happens without contact, where synchronicity reveals invisible order, and where the observer is no longer confined to the skull.
Through lived experience, ancient yogic insight, and subtle parallels to modern physics, this book reveals why intuition works, why meditation opens deeper perception, and why the universe sometimes seems to answer before we even ask. It shows how awareness behaves like a field, how attention acts like resonance, and why the self we think we are is only an interface.
This is not a guide to gaining powers.
It is an unveiling of how reality actually feels when the nervous system becomes coherent and the deeper field of consciousness comes into focus.
As the veil between observer and world begins to thin, something astonishing becomes clear:
You were never as separate as you thought.
And once you feel that truth, the world that once seemed fixed begins to move.