The Imperfect Beauty of Awakening — Authentic Spiritual Growth & Imperfection

No one tells you that awakening can make the cracks louder.
You think you’re walking toward perfection — the end of suffering, the silence of mind, the pure light of clarity. And for a moment, it feels that way. The noise quiets. The walls dissolve. You taste eternity and think, Ah, I’m finally home.

But then something strange happens.
You start seeing more, not less.
You see the flaws in everything — in people, in yourself, in the world that keeps spinning in its messy imperfection. The awakened eye doesn’t blur the edges; it sharpens them. You notice how the divine stumbles through human form, how beauty and decay are forever intertwined.

Awakening isn’t the end of illusion; it’s the end of being able to believe illusion. You can no longer look away from what is broken. Not in yourself, not in others, not in the collective madness we call civilization. Before, you could justify things. Explain them away. Now, falseness burns like acid. You can’t unsee it. And yet, you also can’t judge it — because you realize it’s all part of the same sacred mess.

There’s a popular fantasy that awakening is a final state — a pristine plateau where suffering dissolves and you float serenely through life. But that’s the spiritual equivalent of airbrushed skin. Real awakening exposes the pores, the wrinkles, the scars. It’s not the immaculate image; it’s the negative — the photograph before it’s developed.

You stop chasing perfection, not because you’ve found it, but because you’ve realized it doesn’t exist. There’s no polished state waiting at the end of the path. The cracks are the path. The silence isn’t a finish line; it’s the sound of surrender.

The longer you live inside the seeing, the more ordinary it all becomes. The mystical high gives way to the smallness of dishes, bills, and conversations about the weather. There’s something both heartbreaking and liberating in that. You understand that nothing extraordinary is meant to last — not the visions, not the ecstasies, not even the clarity.

And that’s the miracle of it: you start to find holiness in the ordinary. In the chipped mug. The half-sincere apology. The fading light of a Tuesday evening. Each thing imperfectly perfect, each breath a small act of forgiveness.

Awakening doesn’t turn you into a saint. It makes you transparent. The pretenses melt, but so do the shields. You feel more deeply. You hurt more honestly. You laugh more freely, sometimes at yourself, sometimes at the cosmic joke of it all. You love with the kind of tenderness that only comes from knowing nothing can be held forever.

The idea that awakening brings endless peace is another mirage. The peace is real — but it coexists with everything else. Grief, confusion, exhaustion, joy. They all move through, unresisted. Suffering doesn’t vanish; it becomes sacred. It stops being yours. Pain no longer has to mean something. It just is.

And maybe that’s the quietest revelation — that awakening doesn’t erase the human condition; it includes it. It makes the imperfections of existence more apparent, but also more bearable. You begin to see how the cracks let the light in, and how the light reveals more cracks. It’s a cycle without conclusion, a dance without choreography.

The irony is that before awakening, you believe it will make you special. After awakening, you realize it makes you utterly ordinary — just another flickering light in the vast imperfection of existence. You used to want to become someone extraordinary; now you’re content to simply be.

The mind will still ask, Is this it?
And the answer will come, soft and unspectacular: Yes. This is it.

Maybe that’s what beauty really is — not the absence of cracks, but the light that escapes through them.

Perfection never arrives. Only the quiet recognition that nothing needs to.

About the Author
Akal Sahai Khalsa
Akal Sahai Khalsa’s work bridges devotion, technology, and consciousness. Raised in an ashram and immersed in the sacred music of India since childhood, Akal has spent decades producing and promoting many of the world’s leading spiritual artists. As the founder of BrightStar Events, he continues to build platforms that unite seekers, teachers, and communities in the spirit of Oneness. His approach reflects both discipline and depth—spiritual vision grounded in real-world execution.
What's Next?
The Heart of Surrender - 3-Day, In-Person Retreat
October 24, 2025
The Gyuto Foundation Inc., Bernhard Avenue, Richmond, CA, USA
Learn More
Soak in Bliss: A Masterclass Beyond Mindfulness with Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar
October 19, 2025
Seattle Convention Center | Summit, Pine Street, Seattle, WA, USA
Learn More
Simrit
October 12, 2025
Jackson Wellsprings, Oregon 99, Ashland, OR, USA
Learn More
Continue Your Journey

The Imperfect Beauty of Awakening — Authentic Spiritual Growth & Imperfection

October 27, 2025

inspire, awakening, spiritual awakening, enlightenment, imperfection, consciousness, mindfulness, self-realization, nonduality, spiritual journey, awareness, presence, authenticity, meditation, shadow work, spiritual growth, ego dissolution, transcendence, immanence, acceptance

No one tells you that awakening can make the cracks louder.
You think you’re walking toward perfection — the end of suffering, the silence of mind, the pure light of clarity. And for a moment, it feels that way. The noise quiets. The walls dissolve. You taste eternity and think, Ah, I’m finally home.

But then something strange happens.
You start seeing more, not less.
You see the flaws in everything — in people, in yourself, in the world that keeps spinning in its messy imperfection. The awakened eye doesn’t blur the edges; it sharpens them. You notice how the divine stumbles through human form, how beauty and decay are forever intertwined.

Awakening isn’t the end of illusion; it’s the end of being able to believe illusion. You can no longer look away from what is broken. Not in yourself, not in others, not in the collective madness we call civilization. Before, you could justify things. Explain them away. Now, falseness burns like acid. You can’t unsee it. And yet, you also can’t judge it — because you realize it’s all part of the same sacred mess.

There’s a popular fantasy that awakening is a final state — a pristine plateau where suffering dissolves and you float serenely through life. But that’s the spiritual equivalent of airbrushed skin. Real awakening exposes the pores, the wrinkles, the scars. It’s not the immaculate image; it’s the negative — the photograph before it’s developed.

You stop chasing perfection, not because you’ve found it, but because you’ve realized it doesn’t exist. There’s no polished state waiting at the end of the path. The cracks are the path. The silence isn’t a finish line; it’s the sound of surrender.

The longer you live inside the seeing, the more ordinary it all becomes. The mystical high gives way to the smallness of dishes, bills, and conversations about the weather. There’s something both heartbreaking and liberating in that. You understand that nothing extraordinary is meant to last — not the visions, not the ecstasies, not even the clarity.

And that’s the miracle of it: you start to find holiness in the ordinary. In the chipped mug. The half-sincere apology. The fading light of a Tuesday evening. Each thing imperfectly perfect, each breath a small act of forgiveness.

Awakening doesn’t turn you into a saint. It makes you transparent. The pretenses melt, but so do the shields. You feel more deeply. You hurt more honestly. You laugh more freely, sometimes at yourself, sometimes at the cosmic joke of it all. You love with the kind of tenderness that only comes from knowing nothing can be held forever.

The idea that awakening brings endless peace is another mirage. The peace is real — but it coexists with everything else. Grief, confusion, exhaustion, joy. They all move through, unresisted. Suffering doesn’t vanish; it becomes sacred. It stops being yours. Pain no longer has to mean something. It just is.

And maybe that’s the quietest revelation — that awakening doesn’t erase the human condition; it includes it. It makes the imperfections of existence more apparent, but also more bearable. You begin to see how the cracks let the light in, and how the light reveals more cracks. It’s a cycle without conclusion, a dance without choreography.

The irony is that before awakening, you believe it will make you special. After awakening, you realize it makes you utterly ordinary — just another flickering light in the vast imperfection of existence. You used to want to become someone extraordinary; now you’re content to simply be.

The mind will still ask, Is this it?
And the answer will come, soft and unspectacular: Yes. This is it.

Maybe that’s what beauty really is — not the absence of cracks, but the light that escapes through them.

Perfection never arrives. Only the quiet recognition that nothing needs to.

Get In Touch