Let us be more delusional
It might sound crazy to be “delusional” — but what if it’s actually a recipe for success?
“Delusional” is often the word used for people who trust something beyond what looks reasonable. From the outside, they might seem naïve, unrealistic, even reckless. But if you look closer, what’s really happening is that they’ve stepped outside the inherited belief systems that define what’s “possible” — and they refuse to shrink back inside them.
To those still living by those limits, their faith looks irrational. But inside, it isn’t delusion at all. It’s certainty beyond logic — the deep clarity that rises when limited beliefs no longer set the boundaries of your reality.
In business, in art, in science — and in everyday life — this is how breakthroughs happen. People who hold a vision when others let go. Who dare to believe until reality catches up. From the outside it might look like luck. In truth, it’s the reward of staying faithful to a vision long enough for life to meet it.
👉 Vision that stretches beyond reason.
👉 Self-belief that others call irrational.
👉 Drive that transforms persistence into possibility.
In mysticism, the meaning deepens. “Delusion” is not about escaping reality, but about breaking free from limited beliefs — the fear-shaped frames that quietly dictate what’s realistic before you’ve even tried. Releasing them isn’t denial. It’s loosening consensus so new options become visible.
And I’ve lived this myself. There have been moments when what I trusted looked absurd to others. Times when I was full of doubt in my head — but my whole being said yes. The moment I stopped negotiating with my limited beliefs, what seemed delusional on the outside felt obvious to me. Doors opened. Conversations aligned. What looked impossible began to unfold as natural. Not because it was easy, but because I stayed with it long enough for the gifts to arrive.
That’s what I mean by certainty beyond logic. It’s not blind stubbornness. Not naïve optimism. But a grounded conviction that whispers: stay with this, it matters.
So maybe the question isn’t should we avoid being delusional — but rather: do we dare to be more delusional?
Shift Section: Which limited belief could you release this week — and what would certainty beyond logic make you do next?
Let’s unlock the next evolution together.