The Pull of Emotional Gravity
In Surah Al-A’raf (7:176), we find a striking
analogy:
“And if We had willed, We could have elevated him thereby,
but he adhered to the earth and followed his desires. So his example is like
that of the dog…”
Three powerful words emerge: elevated, adhered to the earth,
and desires.
This is a parable of spiritual gravity. The soul was created
to rise, yet it clings to the earth—dragged down not by physical weight, but by
the heaviness of desire. Desires masquerade as love, duty, or community—but
often, they are anchors, not wings. This is emotional gravity: a force that
binds the spirit to the lowest plane of consciousness.
The Illusion of Hawa: False Centers of Gravity
In Surah Al-Jathiyah (45:23), Allah says:
“Have you seen the one who takes his own desire (hawa) as
his god? And Allah leaves him astray knowingly, seals his hearing and his
heart, and places a veil over his vision…”
Desire becomes deity. When emotional needs become the center
of one's life, they distort vision and harden the heart. The gravity of hawa
pulls the soul into orbit around the self, blinding it to truth.
This distortion is echoed in Surah Al-Muzzammil (73:5):
“Indeed, We will cast upon you a heavy word.”
The Qur’an is described as "heavy"—a vibration dense with divine truth. These words are not merely informative; they are transformative, bearing the spiritual weight of divine reality. Heavy words collide with heavy hearts: they either awaken the soul or crush it.
In contrast, the false Mahdi does not speak the Word of God—he manipulates the weight of wounds, not the weight of revelation. His words lack divine gravity. Instead of piercing illusion, they wrap the soul in delusion. He does not carry the “heavy word” of the Qur’an, but speaks to emotional fractures—needs for family, belonging, and certainty—twisting them into spiritual impostors. These are not divine truths but emotional voids mistaken for faith.
What forms is not a community of light, but a gravitational mass—a dense, reactive cluster in the astral plane. It is not a star of guidance, but a dark star. A collapsing center pulling others inward.
The Ascent and the Struggle
Surah Al-An’am (6:125) captures the feeling of
spiritual escape:
“Whomever Allah wills to guide, He opens his breast to
Islam; and whomever He wills to misguide, He makes his breast tight and
constricted—as though he were climbing into the sky.”
To ascend spiritually is to defy gravity. It feels like
climbing the sky—an impossible task without divine help. It demands energy,
will, discipline, and remembrance. The misguided, weighed down by emotional
density, find even the thought of spiritual ascent unbearable.
In physics, mass creates gravity. In the astral realm, emotional
intensity becomes mass. Grief, rage, desire—when amplified and shared—form clusters
of emotional mass that pull others in. It’s no longer metaphor. It’s real.
Mass, Word, and Vibration
Consider the word mass. In Christianity, the communal ritual
is called Mass—an emotional and spiritual event. The word “mass” denotes weight,
congregation, and gravity. In physics, mass bends space. In spirit, emotional
mass bends perception.
And words—like Qur’anic revelation—are vibrations. Heavy
words carry resonance. They shape consciousness. The word is a force—a
vibration heavy enough to lift or crush, to awaken or drown.
The Astral Plane: Emotion as Substance
In dreams, we unknowingly enter the astral plane. This is
the world of unfulfilled desires, suppressed fears, and subconscious emotion.
It is where the the djinns whisper and manipulate. They do not force—they inflame.
They intensify emotional currents until emotional mass is formed.
This astral mass can become so vast that it develops gravitational
pull. People do not follow a movement—they are pulled into it. The larger the collective
emotion, the harder it becomes to escape.
Herd Mind and NPCs
This gravity creates conformity. People begin to act like Non-Playable
Characters (NPCs)—reciting beliefs and emotions not born of reflection, but of immersion
in a mass consciousness. They are not thinking; they are orbiting.
The Syaitan thrives here—not through force, but through resonance,
tuning into your fears, loneliness, and cravings. The heavier your emotional
mass, the lower your altitude.
Relationships and the Male Struggle
Even in love and marriage, this emotional gravity plays out.
The modern man is often told: “Happy wife, happy life.” But beneath this
cultural mantra lies a deeper dynamic—a quiet surrender of masculine clarity to
emotional control. It is not about harmony; it’s about emotional compliance
disguised as virtue.
Men orbit around emotional expectations because they lack spiritual
propulsion. Like satellites around planets, they are caught in emotional orbits,
rather than choosing their direction.
To rise, they must become like rockets—not merely objects of
ascent, but engines of will and fuel of remembrance. The rocket’s structure is
the discipline of the self, and its fuel is divine remembrance (dhikr),
intention, and spiritual yearning. Without fuel, the vessel remains grounded.
Without fire, there is no escape velocity.
It takes tremendous inner fire to escape emotional
gravity—fire that comes from clarity, detachment, and divine connection.
Emotion = Energy in Motion
Emotion is energy in motion:
- Negative emotions are dense, slow—they pull you down.
- Positive emotions are light, fast—they lift you up.
To manage your emotions is to manage your energy. To
navigate life is to navigate frequencies. Emotions are translations of
energetic realities—just as sight is the brain’s interpretation of photons,
emotions are the soul’s interpretation of vibration.
The Parallel Gravity of Cosmos and Consciousness
Just as the cosmos curves under the weight of stars, so too
does human perception curve under the weight of emotion. The Hermetic Principle of Correspondence—“as above, so below”—applies.
Physical gravity binds matter. Emotional gravity binds minds.
Understanding this is the first step in resisting it.
Liberation: The Vertical Path
The spiritual path is not horizontal—it is vertical. It is a
climb, not a walk. And gravity—physical, emotional, astral—resists it.
To be guided is to ascend.
To be misguided is to sink.
And what determines your direction is simple:
Where does your heart cling?
To the gravity of this world,
or to the light of the Divine?
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