Internal Transit System
How awareness moves in you — and how the Arrival Field helps it stay 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 isn’t something the Field invents. It’s your own internal movement — easier to notice when the environment is coherent.
This page exists to help you recognize what’s already happening — so movement doesn’t get misread or managed too early.
Movement isn’t a cue to act. It’s information.
What Transit Is
Orientation, not control
Even when the body is still, awareness doesn’t stop moving.
It drifts, settles, rises, descends, narrows, widens — often without instruction.
This isn’t instability. It’s transit — the natural movement of awareness as interference reduces.
If you’ve practiced meditation, Reiki, or energy work, you may already recognize this moment: attention begins to organize on its own, without effort.
The Internal Transit System is simply the name for that — so you don’t have to guess what you’re inside.
The Arrival Field doesn’t create movement. It reduces noise so movement can be noticed without being chased.
It’s also legitimate to rest attention in a felt region — not anatomy — and allow transit to organize from there.
Direction Without Force
Orientation reduces friction
Transit inside the Field isn’t powered by will.
Effort often disrupts clarity by introducing a second pull — the mind trying to steer what would otherwise complete.
What gets called “stuck” is usually one of three things:
- awareness trying to hold a position
- attention being evaluated mid-movement
- expectation overriding perception
In each case, movement hasn’t stopped. It’s been constrained.
How this feels often reflects current capacity rather than a problem with movement — a distinction Thresholds help make visible.
Same movement. Same Field. Different capacity changes how it lands.
Naming this isn’t about control. It’s about not mistaking load for failure — or intensity for progress.
The Three Currents
Patterns, not techniques
Vertical current may feel like descent or ascent — grounding, depth, clarity shifting.
Lateral current often feels redistributive — balance, integration, coherence spreading.
Stillness current isn’t absence. It’s interference suspending long enough for movement to resolve.
No current is superior. Each supports a different kind of organization.
Some people describe these as energy or kundalini. Others experience them as attention, sensation, or internal motion. The Field doesn’t require a single interpretation.
Two Legitimate Ways Transit Begins
Voluntary direction and involuntary collaboration
Transit begins in more than one way.
1) Voluntary direction
You choose a focus — a Glyph, a Pathway, or a lived quality — and awareness begins to organize around it.
Sometimes that quality is named internally as an attribute. That language can help — but it isn’t required.
2) Involuntary collaboration
At times, organization begins before choice. A posture, breath shift, or internal pull appears as the system finds its line.
Both are legitimate. Neither is more advanced.
If intensity spikes or strain appears, interpretation isn’t needed. You can scale down — or end cleanly.
How This Connects to Practice and Drawers
Transit clarifies. Drawers apply
Field Forms are optional stabilizers — used only when they make return easier.
They don’t add power. They reduce friction.
Forms can appear anywhere in the rail — before a Pathway, inside a Drawer, or not at all. They’re available wherever stabilization helps.
The five Field Forms currently in use
• Root Lock · Triangle · Heart Bow · Rib Hug · Haney
Drawers are the destinations — the six domains where the Field becomes livable in real life.
Qualities and attributes may operate underneath — but the lived action stays simple: choose a Drawer, and let the Field meet you there.
Before You Continue
Orientation, not control
Awareness moves when interference softens.
You don’t need to manage movement or hold it in place.
Recognition is enough.
Next, we name what you can hold cleanly — so movement isn’t misread as a problem, a cue to act, or a sign to push.
Continue through Fundamentals into Thresholds Overview — or use its coupling link to Field Forms.
If you’re following the Field Entry Path, continue along the Atlas below.