Ubusunagami Changes – July 12, 2007

We all harbor an inherent god within ourselves.

The place it resides is around the right chest.

We say things like “my heart leaps,” “my heart aches,” and “ask your own heart,” and these are true statements.

We don’t know who started saying these things, but there is often unintended truth in expressions that have been handed down from ancient times.

We are born into this reality as humans for the first time when our own soul combines with a divided spirit of the divine spirit (= Ubusunagami, or guardian deity of one’s birthplace).

Many people want to know what kind of god their Ubusunagami is and where it comes from.

However, this is not very meaningful.

This is because, although we start from the combination with the Ubusunagami when we are born, as we grow in this world and depending on how much our own soul is polished, the Ubusunagami is replaced by a higher god.

The inherent god that changes in the process along the way is the internal god.

For example, according to my reading, Munetada Kurozumi’s Ubusunagami was Amenokoyane no Mikoto. However, due to filial piety, correct faith in the spirits, love for family, and effort in his main occupation, eventually, the inherent god changed to Amaterasu Omikami.

Of course, the opposite can also happen.

Depending on how one lives, the inherent god can often become weaker than the Ubusunagami one is born with.

Nevertheless, all Ubusunagami, inherent gods are gods that have separated from the same one source god, that is, a nameless source god, and are connected. All gods are one.

Thank you for keeping me alive.