It cannot be contained in a single explanation.
When you try to view Wayanata as a worldview, it quickly becomes impossible to express with just one word.
There are records of dreams.
There are records of journeys.
There are records of meditation.
There is the reality of everyday life.
Sometimes, something like an angelic realm appears within that.
Sometimes, stories about different layers of spacetime emerge.
Large themes related to the future and salvation sometimes surface.
When listed this way, it might seem too broad.
However, you don't need to understand everything from the beginning.
Rather, when entering Wayanata, I think it's enough to receive it with something like:
There are several worlds hidden within the records.
The foundation is based on real-world records.
When talking about a large worldview, it easily feels detached from reality.
However, the foundation of Wayanata consists of real-world records.
The places where I traveled.
The paths I walked.
The days spent meditating.
Physical sensations.
And the writings written at those times.
These are what exist first.
A worldview doesn't suddenly appear in mid-air.
By rereading these real-world records, another layer appears deeper within them.
That order is important.
There are rooms beyond.
The Wayanata worldview seems to be more than just one large room.
At the entrance, there are real-world records.
There's a room for dreams.
There's a room for journeys.
There's a room for meditation.
Even further back, there might be something like a room of angels.
There might also be a room called the "共栄圏," which seems to have its own flow of time.
There are rooms related to the future and branching paths.
However, you don't need to open all the doors at once from the entrance.
Initially, it is sufficient to simply know that there are rooms beyond.
That something else might exist behind those doors.
Having a sense like that is enough for an introduction.
It's a map, not a setting collection.
When you talk about a worldview, you tend to want to explain everything as if it were a setting collection:
This world is like this.
This character is like this.
This history progresses in this way.
However, with Wayanata, things are not fixed from the beginning.
There are still things that need to be uncovered.
There are provisional ideas.
Some things may require review over time.
Therefore, what exists now is more like a map than a completed setting collection.
Where are the mountains likely to be?
Where are the rivers likely to flow?
What areas are still blank on the map?
I am in the process of drawing these things little by little.
As an Entrance to a Worldview
Wayanata Introduction is not for learning ways of thinking.
It is also not meant to be an entrance where you accept this viewpoint.
Rather, it is intended to open up the map of your worldview just a little bit.
Here are records of reality.
Here are records of dreams.
Here are journeys.
Here are meditations.
And beyond that, there are several worlds that we have not yet been able to name.
I think it's okay to start with that.
Detailed explanations can be added gradually later.
First, understand that there is a world behind the records.
Wayanata is an attempt to open up that map little by little.