The human being is made of three distinct parts, each with a separate body.

Each of us has a physical body, an essence that animates that body and a personality.

Transpersonal psychology, like ancient teachings, teaches the “inner meaning” of these parts and approaches human beings as unfinished, incomplete beings. Nature takes us only up to a certain point, beyond which we must work, know ourselves, to realize our innate potential.

As long as we remain underdeveloped, there is no harmonious relationship between our three centers of consxiousness and their multiple functions and impulses. The same, if not known, have no possibility of relationship with each other, being separated both in activities and manifestations.

Therefore, if the inner reality of the human being is divided into three independent brains believed to be a unity, this explains the perennial contradiction of ourselves. There are no elements of unified government in the ordinary man, no Lord to command the mind that can discipline the feelings and guide with harmony the natural needs of the body.

Let us not delude ourselves further, it is the realization of the Tri-Unity of the Spirit that dwells in everyone, the sacred purpose of our intimate experience. It is the knowledge by identity of this Spirit that is the ultimate meaning of true Life; everything else is a means to an end; an appearance, not the Reality.