The Living Formula

This is a living teaching — not a belief to adopt, but a recognition to remember.

Across cultures, spiritual traditions, scriptures and inner revelations, a single truth has quietly echoed through human experience:

God Is

I Am

You Are

These are not three separate ideas. They are three movements of one consciousness unfolding as presence, expression, and relationship.

God Is — The Universal Principle

This points to the Source aspect — the infinite field of Being that proceeds all form. Here we speak from the impersonal truth —that which remains true in every circumstance.

When we speak from “God Is”, we are naming the qualities of Being itself: love, life, light, wisdom, wholeness, creation, compassion. It's beyond the individual — it's the pure potential, the divine essence.

Example: “God is the boundless love that holds all things in harmony.”

In practical terms, if someone asks about a relationship, this part names, the divine presence behind relationship itself — the unity, the creative love, the intelligence of connection.

“God is the harmony that joins all beings in one heart.”

I Am — The Conscious Realization

Here the divine becomes personal. what was named as Source is now awakening as lived experience..

This part is about alignment — realizing that what God Is, I Am in expression. It's where infinite becomes intimate.

Example: “I am that love expressed as patience, as openness, as the willingness to understand.”

So, in a relationship context I am the reflection of that harmony — the presence through which it naturally flows.

The I Am is where awareness begins to experience itself as expression — gently emerging as creation. It's you becoming conscious of the divine pattern already within you.

“I am love learning how to listen”

You Are — The Mirror of Oneness

This is where the light of realization naturally turns outward — seeing, blessing, and affirming the divine in others and the world.

“You Are” completes the triangle — the return to unity through recognition.

Example: “You are that same love looking back at me through different eyes.”

In relationships, this part affirms the shared divinity — not separate beings reaching toward one another, but one presence meeting itself through form. It is felt in the moment of meeting — in the brief stillness that precedes roles and identity.

“You are the mirror in which I remember who I am.”

As you read this, nothing new is required, only a quiet noticing of what has always been present.