Internal Transit System
A way of recognizing how awareness already moves — so it can remain readable
Movement inside the Arrival Field often shows up before language arrives for it.
Attention shifts. Sensation relocates. A line becomes noticeable, dissolves, and later appears somewhere else.
This movement is not something the Field causes. It is your own internal movement — often easier to notice when experience becomes quiet enough to stay with it without needing to follow or change it.
TRANSIT SURFACE
Awareness often moves before we know what to call it.
Internal Transit names that movement without turning it into something you have to control. It helps you recognize what awareness is already doing when experience becomes quiet enough to notice it.
Transit does not create movement. It makes ongoing movement easier to recognize.
FIELD NOTE
“Sometimes what changes is not the movement itself, but your ability to stay with it.”
What Transit Is
Orientation, not control
Even when the body is still, awareness does not stop moving.
It may drift, settle, rise, descend, narrow, or widen — often without instruction.
Over time, this becomes recognizable as a natural part of how attention behaves when it is no longer being directed.
If you have practiced meditation, Reiki, or energy work, you may already recognize moments where attention begins organizing on its own.
Internal Transit is simply a way of recognizing that movement without needing to control it.
Over time, what first feels unfamiliar often becomes easier to remain with.
The Arrival Field does not create movement. It makes it easier to notice what is already occurring without needing to follow or change it.
Direction Without Force
Movement does not need to be managed
Transit inside the Field is not something you have to power.
At times, movement can feel unclear, paused, or uneven.
This is often less about something being wrong, and more about attention tightening around the movement itself.
When that happens, movement can feel constrained.
Movement often resolves more easily when it is no longer being managed.
Just as often, the same movement settles on its own when attention is no longer trying to track it.
It needs somewhere steady enough to be recognized.
The Three Currents
Common ways movement is recognized
You do not need to track this.
Most people do not notice it at first.
But over time, movement tends to show up in a few simple ways.
Vertical
Movement along an up–down axis.
Attention may settle downward into the body or lift upward into clarity. Often felt as grounding, rising, or internal alignment reorganizing.
Lateral
Movement across the body.
Experience may spread, redistribute, or balance itself from one area to another. Often felt as evening out or rebalancing.
Stillness
Movement resolving into quiet.
Not the absence of movement — but movement becoming subtle enough that something settles on its own. Often felt as completion without effort.
They are ways people sometimes recognize how awareness is already moving.
Some describe this as energy. Others as attention or sensation.
How This Connects to the Field
Movement becomes clearer here. Living with it happens elsewhere.
Transit helps movement remain readable.
It does not need to become something you manage.
At times, simple supports may be present — physical or internal — that make staying with the experience easier.
At other times, nothing additional is needed.
Where this becomes livable is elsewhere — in the Drawers, where what is already present can remain closer to life.
Internal Transit helps you recognize movement. The rest of the Field helps what is touched remain easier to stay connected to.
From Here
What can remain steady without becoming too much
The next pages move away from movement itself and toward capacity.
Thresholds help recognize what can be carried cleanly without strain.
Practice Entry moves in a different direction — toward direct participation instead of observation.
If you are following the Field Entry Path, continue along the Atlas below.