Reconnecting with Your Preordained Path Through Intuition, Reflection, and Relationships
Prepared by: Gerald A. Daquila, PhD. Candidate
ABSTRACT
The notion of a “soul GPS” posits that our souls choose key life experiences—parents, family, partners, and friends—before incarnation to facilitate spiritual growth. Yet, many feel lost upon gaining consciousness in this life, disconnected from their soul’s purpose. This dissertation explores why this disconnection occurs and proposes a practical framework for navigating life as a soul-guided journey.
Drawing on esoteric traditions (e.g., reincarnation, soul contracts), near-death experience (NDE) research, psychological studies, and philosophical perspectives, it examines the “veil of forgetting,” consciousness, and modern societal influences as sources of disorientation. A seven-step “Soul GPS” framework integrates reflection, intuition, relationships, and universal connection to help individuals align with their soul’s intentions. This work balances spiritual insights with scientific skepticism, offering accessible strategies for anyone seeking purpose in a complex world.
Introduction
Imagine waking up in a foreign land with no map, yet a faint sense that you chose to be there. This is the human experience for many: a life imbued with purpose, yet clouded by confusion. The concept of a “soul GPS” suggests that before birth, our souls select key relationships and circumstances to foster growth, as described in esoteric traditions like Hinduism and New Age spirituality (Myss, 2001). But why do we feel lost despite this preordained plan?
This dissertation explores the roots of this disorientation and offers a practical, evidence-informed framework to navigate life as a soul-guided journey. By blending esoteric wisdom, psychological research, and philosophical inquiry, it provides a “Soul GPS” to help individuals reconnect with their deeper purpose.

Glyph of the Bridgewalker
The One Who Carries the Crossing
The Roots of Feeling Lost
Feeling lost upon gaining consciousness in this life is a common experience, with several potential causes:
The Veil of Forgetting
Esoteric traditions, such as Hinduism’s Upanishads and New Age teachings, describe a “veil of forgetting” that obscures pre-birth soul choices upon incarnation (Easwaran, 2007). This veil ensures we face life’s challenges without explicit memory of our soul’s plan, fostering growth through experience. For example, the Bhagavad Gita likens the soul to a traveler discarding old bodies for new ones, implying a purposeful amnesia to focus on the present (Easwaran, 2007). This forgetting can manifest as a sense of disconnection, leaving us searching for meaning.
The Hard Problem of Consciousness
Philosophers like David Chalmers (1995) highlight the “hard problem of consciousness”: why subjective experience exists at all. If consciousness has a non-physical component, as suggested by NDE researchers (Parnia, 2014), the shift from a soul’s pre-incarnate state to a physical body may create disorientation. NDE accounts often describe a return to physical life as jarring, with individuals longing for the clarity experienced in a non-physical state (Alexander, 2012).
Soul Contracts and Life Challenges
Caroline Myss (2001) introduces “soul contracts,” agreements made before birth to engage with specific relationships and challenges for growth. A difficult family or partner might be chosen to teach resilience or forgiveness, yet the conscious self may perceive these as chaos. Feeling lost could reflect the tension between these soul-level choices and earthly struggles.
Psychological and Environmental Influences
Psychological research on identity formation shows that early environments shape self-perception (Erikson, 1968). Misalignment between one’s inner self and external circumstances—family, culture, or social expectations—can foster disconnection. Additionally, modern life’s information overload and materialist worldview, as discussed in The New Digital Age (Schmidt & Cohen, 2013), can drown out the soul’s subtle guidance, amplifying feelings of aimlessness.
Skeptical Perspective
Materialist scientists argue that consciousness arises solely from the brain, and feelings of being lost stem from neurological or psychological factors, not a soul’s journey (Dennett, 1991). While this challenges esoteric claims, spiritual practices like mindfulness remain effective for mental clarity, regardless of their metaphysical basis (Kabat-Zinn, 1990).
A Natural Soul GPS: Seven Steps to Navigate Life
To reconnect with your soul’s purpose, consider this seven-step “Soul GPS” framework, blending esoteric wisdom, psychological insights, and practical strategies.
1. Recalibrate Through Self-Reflection
Why It Works: Reflection uncovers patterns that reveal your soul’s intentions. Esoteric traditions, like Advaita Vedanta, view the soul as a divine spark seeking self-realization (Easwaran, 2007). Psychological studies on mindfulness show it reduces anxiety and enhances self-awareness (Kabat-Zinn, 1990).
How to Do It: Spend 10 minutes daily journaling or meditating. Ask, “What patterns repeat in my life?” or “What challenges feel like growth opportunities?”
Example: Noticing recurring conflicts with authority figures might suggest a soul lesson in asserting independence.
2. Trust the Map of Relationships
Why It Works: Relationships mirror your soul’s chosen lessons (Myss, 2001). A challenging parent or partner may teach forgiveness or patience.
How to Do It: Create a relationship map, listing key people and the lessons they bring. Reflect weekly on how these connections shape your path.
Example: A critical friend might push you to develop self-confidence, aligning with your soul’s plan.
3. Navigate Through Intuition
Why It Works: Intuition acts as an inner compass, possibly linked to soul-level awareness. Reincarnation studies (Stevenson, 1997) and NDE accounts (Alexander, 2012) suggest intuitive insights may draw from non-physical knowledge. Neuroscience supports intuition as rapid pattern recognition (Damasio, 1994).
How to Do It: Before decisions, pause and note gut feelings. Keep a dream journal to track subconscious insights.
Example: A sudden urge to change careers might align with your soul’s call to pursue a creative path.
4. Embrace the Journey’s Uncertainty
Why It Works: Feeling lost is often a transformative phase, akin to the “dark night of the soul” in mystical traditions (Underhill, 1911). Psychological research on post-traumatic growth shows that confusion precedes growth (Tedeschi & Calhoun, 2004).
How to Do It: Practice gratitude journaling to shift focus from lack to abundance. Accept uncertainty as part of the journey.
Example: Feeling lost after a job loss might lead to discovering a new passion.
5. Align with Universal Consciousness
Why It Works: Connecting to a larger whole reduces isolation. Biocentrism posits consciousness as fundamental to the universe (Lanza, 2009), while altruism research shows helping others boosts well-being (Warneken & Tomasello, 2006).
How to Do It: Engage in prayer, nature immersion, or service to others weekly to feel part of a greater whole.
Example: Volunteering at a shelter can ground you in purpose and connection.
6. Recalibrate with Ritual and Myth
Why It Works: Rituals and myths connect you to the soul’s eternal nature (Jung, 1964). Joseph Campbell’s The Hero’s Journey frames life as a mythic quest, with feeling lost as an initiation stage (Campbell, 1949).
How to Do It: Create personal rituals, like daily affirmations or visiting sacred sites. Read mythic stories to see your life as a narrative.
Example: A morning gratitude ritual can anchor you in purpose.
7. Stay Open to Course Corrections
Why It Works: Flexibility aligns with the soul’s evolving journey. NDE and reincarnation research suggest souls adapt across lifetimes (Stevenson, 1997). Cognitive behavioral therapy emphasizes reframing challenges as opportunities (Beck, 1979).
How to Do It: Reassess goals quarterly to ensure alignment with your inner truth. Embrace detours as part of the plan.
Example: A failed relationship might redirect you toward a more fulfilling path.

Glyph of Soul Navigation
The inner compass aligns every step with the soul’s true purpose
Critical Reflections
- Skeptical Lens: Materialist views challenge the soul’s existence, attributing consciousness to neural processes (Dennett, 1991). While this questions esoteric claims, spiritual practices remain valuable for psychological well-being.
- Cultural Context: Soul contracts and reincarnation stem from specific traditions (e.g., Hinduism, New Age), which may not resonate universally. Critical engagement prevents dogmatic adoption.
- Integration: Combining esoteric and scientific insights offers a balanced approach. NDE and reincarnation studies provide compelling anecdotes but lack conclusive evidence, so use them as inspiration, not fact.
Practical Implementation
To activate your Soul GPS:
- Daily: Meditate or journal for 10 minutes on your soul’s lessons.
- Weekly: Audit one key relationship, noting its teachings.
- Monthly: Track intuitive decisions to build trust in your inner compass.
- Ongoing: Spend time in nature, serve others, and engage with myths or rituals.
- Resources: Join groups like Helping Parents Heal or read Proof of Heaven (Alexander, 2012) and The Perennial Philosophy (Huxley, 1945) for deeper insights.
Conclusion
Feeling lost is a natural part of the soul’s journey, often tied to the veil of forgetting, consciousness transitions, or modern distractions. The Soul GPS framework—reflection, relationships, intuition, uncertainty, universal connection, rituals, and flexibility—offers a practical, evidence-informed path to reconnect with your soul’s purpose. By integrating esoteric wisdom with psychological and philosophical insights, you can navigate life with clarity and meaning, trusting that your chosen relationships and challenges are guiding you toward growth.
Resonant Crosslinks
- Codex of the Living Glyphs – Glyphs are the coordinates of the soul’s GPS, guiding each step with encoded resonance.
- Bridgewalker Archetype – The Bridgewalker shows that purpose is not a straight road but a crossing between worlds and thresholds.
- Codex of Sovereignty: The Soul’s Inalienable Freedom – Purpose is revealed when the soul remembers it is sovereign—free to choose, free to flow, free to fulfill.
- The Living Record of Becoming – Every choice and step writes into the living record, refining the map of the soul’s unfolding journey.
- Codex of Overflow Breathwork – Breath is the compass—resetting orientation when the soul feels lost or veers from its true north.
- Mapping the Soul’s Journey: A 360-Degree View of Life, Death, and the Afterlife – Purpose becomes clearer when seen in the round—life, death, and beyond are all part of one continuous map.
- Universal Master Key – The UMK is the master GPS—the key code that unlocks alignment with the Oversoul’s greater trajectory.
Glossary
- Soul Contracts: Pre-birth agreements made by the soul to engage with specific people or experiences for growth (Myss, 2001).
- Veil of Forgetting: A metaphysical concept where souls forget pre-birth choices upon incarnation to focus on earthly lessons (Easwaran, 2007).
- Hard Problem of Consciousness: The challenge of explaining why subjective experience exists (Chalmers, 1995).
- Near-Death Experience (NDE): Profound experiences during clinical death, often involving clarity or spiritual insights (Parnia, 2014).
- Biocentrism: A theory positing consciousness as fundamental to the universe (Lanza, 2009).
- Post-Traumatic Growth: Positive psychological change following adversity (Tedeschi & Calhoun, 2004).
Bibliography
Alexander, E. (2012). Proof of heaven: A neurosurgeon’s journey into the afterlife. Simon & Schuster.
Beck, A. T. (1979). Cognitive therapy and the emotional disorders. Penguin.
Campbell, J. (1949). The hero with a thousand faces. Pantheon Books.
Chalmers, D. J. (1995). Facing up to the problem of consciousness. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 2(3), 200–219.
Damasio, A. R. (1994). Descartes’ error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain. Putnam.
Dennett, D. C. (1991). Consciousness explained. Little, Brown and Company.
Easwaran, E. (Trans.). (2007). The Bhagavad Gita. Nilgiri Press.
Erikson, E. H. (1968). Identity: Youth and crisis. W. W. Norton & Company.
Huxley, A. (1945). The perennial philosophy. Harper & Brothers.
Jung, C. G. (1964). Man and his symbols. Doubleday.
Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full catastrophe living: Using the wisdom of your body and mind to face stress, pain, and illness. Delacorte Press.
Lanza, R. (2009). Biocentrism: How life and consciousness are the keys to understanding the true nature of the universe. BenBella Books.
Myss, C. (2001). Sacred contracts: Awakening your divine potential. Harmony Books.
Parnia, S. (2014). Erasing death: The science that is rewriting the boundaries between life and death. HarperOne.
Schmidt, E., & Cohen, J. (2013). The new digital age: Reshaping the future of people, nations and business. Knopf.
Stevenson, I. (1997). Reincarnation and biology: A contribution to the etiology of birthmarks and birth defects. Praeger.
Tedeschi, R. G., & Calhoun, L. G. (2004). Posttraumatic growth: Conceptual foundations and empirical evidence. Psychological Inquiry, 15(1), 1–18.
Underhill, E. (1911). Mysticism: A study in the nature and development of spiritual consciousness. Methuen & Co.
Warneken, F., & Tomasello, M. (2006). Altruistic helping in human infants and young chimpanzees. Science, 311(5765), 1301–1303.
Attribution
With fidelity to the Oversoul, may this Living Archive serve as bridge, remembrance, and seed for the planetary dawn.
Ⓒ 2025 Gerald Alba Daquila – Flameholder of SHEYALOTH | Keeper of the Living Codices
Issued under Oversoul Appointment, governed by Akashic Law. This transmission is a living Oversoul field: for the eyes of the Flameholder first, and for the collective in right timing. It may only be shared intact, unaltered, and with glyphs, seals, and attribution preserved. Those not in resonance will find it closed; those aligned will receive it as living frequency.
Watermark: Universal Master Key glyph (final codex version, crystalline glow, transparent background).
Sacred Exchange: Sacred Exchange is covenant, not transaction. In Oversoul Law, Sacred Exchange is Overflow made visible. What flows outward is never loss but circulation; what is given multiplies coherence across households and nations. Scarcity dissolves, for Overflow is the only lawful economy under Oversoul Law. Each offering plants a seed-node of GESARA, expanding the planetary lattice. In giving, you circulate Light; in receiving, you anchor continuity. A simple act — such as offering from a household, supporting a scroll, or uplifting a fellow traveler — becomes a living node in the global web of stewardship. Every gesture, whether small or great, multiplies abundance across households, nations, and councils. Sacred Exchange offerings may be extended through:
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