Introduction

Welcome to Liminal Shift. The space between where you are and where you're going.

This platform is built on the principles of Reality Transurfing—a book by Vadim Zeland that offers a different way of thinking about how life unfolds and how you move through it.

Here's the core idea.

Imagine that every possible version of your life already exists. Not as fantasy, but as real alternatives—paths you could walk, lives you could live. Transurfing calls these life lines. You're always on one. And you can shift to another.

When you want something badly—when you grip it tightly, obsess over it, need it to happen—you create what Transurfing calls excess potential. It's like gripping sand. The harder you squeeze, the more slips through. The universe doesn't respond well to desperation. It responds to ease.

So the practice isn't about forcing outcomes. It's about reducing importance. Letting the goal matter, but not too much. Wanting it, but not needing it. This is one of the most counterintuitive shifts you'll make—and one of the most powerful.

There's another piece to this: the difference between inward and outward intention. Inward intention is your personal will—the effort you put in, the actions you take. Outward intention is something larger. It's when life starts moving with you, not against you. Doors open. Things align. You can't force outward intention, but you can invite it—by releasing the grip, by trusting the process.

And that process is what Liminal Shift focuses on.

When you create a goal here, you're not just naming a destination. You're defining the next shift—the milestone that moves you from one life line to another. And the visualizations we create aren't about seeing the end result. They're about feeling the transition. Becoming the person who arrives there naturally. That's the slide—the internal shift that precedes the external one.

Your mind might know what you want. But your heart has to believe it's possible. When those two align—when mind and heart are united—you stop fighting yourself. That's when movement happens.

But there's something else that gets in the way. Pendulums.

A pendulum is any structure that feeds on attention. It could be the news cycle. Social media. Workplace drama. Even movements you believe in. They hook you through emotional reactions—positive or negative—and drain your energy. The more importance you give them, the stronger their pull.

The way out isn't to fight them. Fighting feeds them just as much as engaging. The way out is to stop reacting. To notice without being hooked. To withdraw your energy and return to yourself.

That's what the pendulum tools here are for. Journaling helps you notice what's pulling at you. Naming a pendulum helps you see it clearly. And detachment scripts help you release its grip—not by resisting, but by letting go.

This is the practice. Shift toward what you want by becoming the person who has it. Release what drains you by withdrawing your attention.

That's Liminal Shift. And we're glad you're here.

0:00 / 0:00