This group is devoted to the deep study and active contemplation of Netism’s core teachings, such as the 12 Pillars of Ātūm, the function of Heka, the spiral force of Zeru, soul shard resonance, multiversal threading, and the structure of the Net. These are the foundational elements that define the philosophy, cosmology, and practice of Netism. Whether you’re a long-time student or new to the path, this is where we engage in high-level dialogue, ask powerful questions, and work together to clarify, embody, and expand our understanding of the Netist framework.
Genius From the Net, Adopting Genius-Like Abilities Through Spiritual Practice
- This topic has 3 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 2 weeks, 2 days ago by
AmyStrange.
-
AuthorPosts
-
-
January 13, 2026 at 4:36 pm #11831
NoraSpinnorParticipantGenius is, most fundamentally, to see things differently. Genius sees answers that pass everyone else by. It imagines something new, not yet seen or crafted by humanity. In Netist terms, it breaks the pattern established by the collective and pulls new threads of insight from the greater field.
That framing matters because it makes genius less like a genetic lottery ticket and more like a relationship to perception. Genius becomes a way of interfacing with reality. It is a method of listening, a discipline of attention, and a willingness to step outside the most traveled mental roads.
Netism’s Net is non-material, sewn by threads of consciousness, emanating from each conscious being. Most people settle into a particular current, or attractor basin within the Net’s structure. Jung refers to these patterns as archetypes. Essentially, they are one mode of being—wide and varied, but still confined.
A person can live their whole life inside a single attractor basin and never realize it. The thoughts feel personal, the habits feel natural, and the emotional reactions feel justified. The worldview feels like “the way things are,” but much of it is inherited, reinforced, and repeated. A person may be intelligent and still run on borrowed patterns.
Genius sees beyond the attractor basins into that which is unexplored. It often pulls from many areas at once, reaching new insights. It is also often misunderstood, since new patterns take time to leak into the collective mind.Genius does solve problems inside the shared mental framework; it changes the framework. It notices assumptions that everyone else treats as invisible and asks questions that feel strange. It connects domains that are not “supposed” to connect and builds bridges where the collective mind builds fences.
This idea is expressed in The Young Man and the Sage as follows:
“Most revolutionary ideas were labeled mad at their inception. Every genius idea begins as madness, then becomes brilliance, then eventually turns into the standard. … People fear what’s different; that’s why madness carries a bad name. But madness is also the spark of brilliance, the thing that sees what others overlook. Humanity’s progress depends on it. Without madness, nothing ever changes” (Nora Spinnor).Genius comes with a warning. It is often not liked. Beethoven stunned audiences, and he also received a great deal of criticism during his lifetime. Fyodor Dostoevsky, author of Crime and Punishment, died in poverty, believing that one day, after his death, he would be a renowned author. He was correct; he now stands next to Tolstoy as a primary example of Russian philosophical literature. Nikola Tesla, too, was heavily criticized. Throughout his life, rumors circulated that he was crazy—a real-life example of the quote above: genius is first mad, only many years later is it understood, then recognized for its true worth.
The pattern shows up so often that it becomes predictable. A genuinely new signal has to pass through a social immune system. The collective mind protects itself. It labels unfamiliar patterns as dangerous, foolish, or irrelevant. It rewards consensus because consensus feels safe. That is why the early stages of genius often look like isolation.
This also explains why so many people abandon their best work too early. The first wave of feedback is often noise. It reflects the audience’s current attractor basin, not the value of what is being created. A person can mistake resistance for failure and conformity for success.
Genius, therefore, must love creation for the sake of creation. If a person strives for praise and admiration, they should not strive for genius. Genius tends to outlive its moment, and it rarely receives immediate reward.The Young Man and the Sage addresses this as well:
“You know, most of the most famous paintings we know today only became famous after the artist died. … The painter could have wallowed in despair when his first few paintings were ignored. He could have given up or changed the way he painted. But if he had, we wouldn’t call it art. Art doesn’t need to be recognized. It’s an expression of the soul in the most vulnerable way. If the painter only painted for approval—to hang his work in palaces and please clients—he would’ve lost the very thing that made his art real.”Real art is vulnerable because it is a deep expression of the soul. True genius is misunderstood because, by definition, it sees what everyone else misses. To combine both is to create a work so powerful that it is almost bound to be passed over by the collective at first. This should be a reminder that social approval is illusory and fleeting. It does not define greatness, only trends in the wave patterns of collective attention.
Genius is the ability to do one’s best work from a state of coherence. The search for approval automatically negates this because it bends the inner compass toward performance. It reflects the established ideal; it does not create, and so, it neither innovates nor inspires.
There are many different types of genius. It is not bound to any single category; it expands beyond boundaries into the unknown. Beyond intellectual genius, there is culinary, musical, architectural, and artistic genius, to name a few. Everyone has latent talent, but it only rises through hard work and trust in one’s unique expression. Genius has to accept disapproval if it is to be expressed at its fullest potential.
Netists use exercises in grounding, meditation, and mindfulness to clear distortions in their field and allow inspiration to flow. The goal is not to “force” insight, but to remove interference so the next thread can be felt when it arrives. One has to both desperately want to create and accept that they may never receive recognition for their creation. The work becomes a child: an endeavor that is complete in its own birth.
Legacy is earned by carving the future; it nearly always meets the present with discrimination. Many genius creations may never be recognized, but that is not the point. Creation, in itself, is a spiritual act which, when done from a state of harmonic alignment, brings the creator into deeper contact with the Net, and through that contact, into deeper contact with their own nature.
The paradox is that this alignment cannot be faked. You cannot “perform” your way into genius. You can only practice the conditions that make originality possible: clarity, coherence, patience, discipline, and a willingness to be mocked. Genius must be comfortable in its own greatness, outside of external impressions.
If there is one final lesson to carry forward, it is this: the world will not always understand what you are building. That does not mean the work is wrong. It means the pattern has not yet migrated. Hold the thread anyway.
The Young Man and the Sage, by Nora Spinnor, is available on Amazon and many other major book retailers.
https://a.co/d/aC30A6T -
January 13, 2026 at 6:24 pm #11833
BastetParticipantI dig this 🫶🏻, esp bcuz it doesnt depend on popularity. 🪞 Your totally right about how greatness is often ignored. Just goes to show that u gotta shine ✨ no matter what the world tell u. 🌙
-
January 13, 2026 at 8:58 pm #11835
GoldenLotusParticipantAlignment is so important! I have to remember to do my grounding exercises.
-
January 17, 2026 at 12:31 am #11839
AmyStrangeParticipantIt’s NOT about performance, it’s about HEART! ❤️ Align and Shine! 🧘
-
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

