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Inspiration

Waking Up to True Nature:Start With Authentic Desire

Jai Dev Singh
Jai Dev Singh
Oct 8, 2025
5 min read
Watch · 6

TLDR: Dr. Angelo DiLullo identifies the foundational step in actualizing your true nature: moving beyond technique to touch into your deepest, most authentic desire—whether that's ending suffering, transcending self-concept, or breaching the veil of perception. This inquiry must be genuinely felt, not intellectually constructed, and serves as the North Star for any inward journey.

Read · 6 sections

What Is the First Step in Waking Up?

When asked for a single technique or approach to beginning the process of actualizing one's true nature, Dr. DiLullo sidesteps the allure of method and points instead to something more foundational: authenticity with yourself about what you genuinely want. This is not a generic affirmation or borrowed aspiration. It must be real for you—something you can feel into, even when words fail.

The distinction matters. Many seekers begin with borrowed goals: enlightenment because it sounds noble, peace because the culture promises it, liberation because a teacher suggested it. DiLullo's instruction cuts through that. The work begins when you ask yourself, with brutal honesty, what is actually moving in you? What longing lives beneath the social masks and inherited beliefs?

How Do You Touch Into Desire Beyond Words?

DiLullo offers that the authentic impulse may crystallize into a clear statement—"I want to move beyond the limitations of what I take myself to be"—or it may remain nebulous, a felt sense just beyond language. Both are valid entry points. The key is not clarity but resonance: does it vibrate as true when you feel into it?

He describes several forms this authentic desire might take:

  • Ending unnecessary suffering: The recognition that the pain you carry has no inherent requirement. It is maintained by habit, identification, or misperception—and can be released.
  • Transcending self-concept: The impulse to move beyond the limitations of what you take yourself to be; to recognize that your sense of identity is constructed, not fixed.
  • Perceiving beyond thought: The intuition that "there's something just beyond my vision, just beyond the walls of these thoughts." A felt sense that perception itself is veiled by the thinking mind.

What matters is that you touch into one of these—or something altogether unique to your own unfolding—and allow it to become real in your body, not just your intellect.

What Makes an Authentic Motivation Real?

DiLullo emphasizes that authenticity is not always comfortable. You may touch into suffering when you ask yourself this question. You may encounter fear, grief, or the weight of your own longing. This discomfort is not a sign you're doing it wrong. Rather, it's evidence you're moving past the sanitized, spiritualized versions of desire and meeting something true.

The inward journey itself requires trust—trust that the discomfort of facing what you really want, beneath the noise, is part of the path. The question "What am I most authentically interested in doing with this moment, with this lifetime?" is not meant to produce a feel-good answer. It's meant to crack open your assumptions about what you should want, so that what you do want can emerge.

Why Does Motivation Matter Before Method?

Technique without motivation is empty. You can accumulate practices, meditation hours, and spiritual knowledge without ever touching the engine that makes practice alive. DiLullo's emphasis on starting with authentic desire recognizes this: the first step is not a practice but a question—and the willingness to stay with that question until you feel a real answer, not a correct one.

This approach aligns with the invitation to DiLullo's Simply Always Awake silent retreat: a space designed for those who sense there's something more—something real, something awake. The retreat is not for people seeking a technique to acquire; it's for those already moved by an unspoken longing, who are ready to explore what that longing is pointing toward.

How Do You Know Your Desire Is Authentic?

Authentic desire has a quality of aliveness. It may be wordless, but it's palpable. It may be uncomfortable, but it's undeniable. If you have to convince yourself that you want something, it's likely not authentic. Authentic desire doesn't need persuasion; it needs permission—the permission to admit it, to feel it, to let it matter.

DiLullo's teaching here is stripped of complexity. No elaborate cosmology, no promise of states to achieve. Simply: get honest with yourself about what you really want, feel that desire in your body, and let that feeling guide your inquiry. Everything else flows from there.

Where to Go From Here

If this inquiry resonates, the next move is inward. Sit with the question DiLullo poses: What am I most authentically interested in doing with this moment, with this lifetime? Don't rush to answer. Don't polish the answer for respectability. Feel into it. Notice what arises when you stop hiding from your own longing. This is the threshold DiLullo describes—the point where waking up begins, not with a technique, but with truth.

Transcript

[0:00] Is there one technique or approach I

[0:02] recommend to someone who wants to begin

[0:06] the process of

[0:08] actualizing their true nature? Start by

[0:12] being deeply authentic with yourself

[0:18] about what it is you want. Even if it's

[0:21] beyond words,

[0:23] feel into it. Touch into that.

[0:27] It may be

[0:30] stable with a statement like I want to

[0:33] move beyond the limitations of what I

[0:35] take myself to be.

[0:37] I want to end this suffering that seems

[0:41] so unnecessary.

[0:44] It may be I want to breach the veil of

[0:47] perception. I feel like there's

[0:49] something just beyond my vision, just

[0:52] beyond the walls of these thoughts.

[0:56] Whatever it is, touch into that. It has

[0:59] to be real for you. What is motivating

[1:03] you to want to engage this process?

[1:06] That's the first step.

[1:09] Feel deeply in. It may not even feel

[1:10] comfortable. You may touch into some

[1:12] suffering, but trust that inward journey

[1:16] as you ask yourself, what am I most

[1:19] authentically interested in doing with

[1:22] this moment, with this lifetime?

Jai Dev Singh
AuthorJai Dev Singh

Watch more from Jai Dev Singh on YouTube.

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True-natureAuthentic-desireAwakeningSelf-inquirySpiritual-practice

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Dr. DiLullo teaches that the first step is becoming deeply authentic with yourself about what you truly want, even if it cannot be put into words. This means feeling into your genuine longing—whether it's ending suffering, transcending self-concept, or perceiving beyond the limits of thought—rather than adopting borrowed spiritual goals.
Authentic desire has a felt quality of aliveness in your body and doesn't require self-persuasion. It may be uncomfortable or wordless, but it's undeniable and palpable. If you have to convince yourself you want something spiritual, it's likely not genuinely motivating you.
Yes. DiLullo emphasizes that your authentic desire may not crystallize into clear language; it may remain a felt sense just beyond thought. What matters is that you can feel into it and sense its truth in your body, not that you can articulate it perfectly.
DiLullo teaches that discomfort when exploring authentic desire is not a sign you're doing it wrong. The inward journey may touch on real suffering, and trusting that process—even when uncomfortable—is part of the work of actualizing your true nature.
No. DiLullo emphasizes that technique without authentic motivation is empty. The actual first step is the honest self-inquiry into what you genuinely want—the motivation that makes practice alive, not the practice itself.
DiLullo suggests sitting with the question: 'What am I most authentically interested in doing with this moment, with this lifetime?' Rather than rushing to answer, feel into it without sanitizing or spiritualizing your response. Notice what emerges when you stop hiding from your own longing.

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