TLDR: Most people believe their fulfillment lies in external achievements or possessions—a house, wealth, status, a relationship. But the experience they actually desire from acquiring these things already exists within them right now. The work is not acquiring more but removing the perception of lack that prevents us from recognizing what we already are: freedom, peace, and love incarnate.
What Do We Really Want?
According to Peter Crone, we operate under a fundamental misunderstanding about desire. We believe we want a specific external object—a house in the South of France, a promotion, a romantic partner. But Crone argues this is only the surface layer of the wanting. What we actually want is the experience we believe that object will provide.
"The thing that we think we want is not what we want. We want what we think is on the other side of having it," Crone explains. When someone pursues a luxury home, they're not pursuing the structure itself. They're pursuing the experience they imagine that home will deliver: peace, belonging, security, or a sense of arrival.
This distinction is not semantic—it changes everything about how we approach our lives.
The Experience Is Already Available
Here is the central teaching: the experience we're chasing is not located on the other side of acquiring the object. It's available right now. Crone offers a concrete example: "I can have the experience of a house in the South of France before even having the house. At which point I may no longer need to have the house."
This is not escapism or fantasy. It's a recognition that experiences—peace, freedom, love, security—are internal states, not external deliverables. They can be accessed regardless of external circumstances. The person who mentally and emotionally inhabits the peace of that house in the South of France has already realized the state they were pursuing. The physical house becomes optional.
This principle extends to all desires. The experience of being valued, seen, or respected can be realized internally before—or instead of—waiting for external validation. The experience of security can be embodied before accumulating a certain net worth. The experience of freedom can be lived before changing jobs or leaving a relationship.
Why We Collapse the Interior With the Exterior
Crone identifies a perceptual collapse at the root of suffering: we conflate the internal state with the external object. "We're everything that we're looking for. We're under the impression that it's out there is the means to getting that experience. And that's the facade. That's the lie. That's the pretense."
This confusion leads to what appears to be victimhood but is actually misperception. People believe they are victims of their circumstances—that without the house, the partner, the job title, they cannot have the experience they desire. But Crone redirects this: "They're not [victims]. It's the perception of the circumstance cuz they think there's something lacking in them in the first place."
The problem is not circumstance. The problem is the belief that something essential is missing from who and what we already are. This belief, once held, ensures that external acquisition will never deliver what it promises. Even after obtaining the object, the internal sense of lack remains—because it was never the object's responsibility to fill it.
The Cost of Efforting Our Lives Away
When we remain convinced that fulfillment is external, we "effort our lives away trying to get what we think is going to go under the very experience that's actually available to us right now." We spend our energy, attention, and years pursuing something we already possess.
This is the mechanics of what Crone calls a "revelatory process" versus a "getting process." Most people operate in the getting mode: accumulate more, achieve more, become more. But according to Crone, life is actually a process of revelation—of uncovering and recognizing what is already true about us.
What Are We Actually Looking For?
Crone names the actual objects of desire: "Which I would put in words like freedom, peace, love." These are not things to be obtained in some distant future. They are states to be recognized and embodied now. Freedom is not the result of changing circumstances; it is the recognition that your essential nature is not bound by circumstance. Peace is not the absence of problems; it is the recognition of an unshakeable ground beneath them. Love is not a feeling that arrives when the right person or situation shows up; it is the ground of our being waiting to be recognized.
The Revelatory Path: Dissolving, Not Acquiring
The practical work, then, is not to chase harder or achieve more. It's the opposite. "It's not about getting something. It's actually about removing and dissolving what's in the way of realizing that I am that which I'm looking for."
This is the paradox Crone points to: we are looking for ourselves. The house, the achievement, the relationship—these are all symbols of a search for the self. But the self is what is doing the looking. We are the very thing we seek. The work is to remove the layers of misperception—the belief in lack, the conviction that we need to be different, the assumption that completion is elsewhere—and recognize what is already the case.
When this recognition lands, the outer world doesn't disappear. But the relationship to it changes entirely. You may still pursue and obtain things. But you are no longer chasing them as the means to an experience you already have. You are free to engage with the world from a place of wholeness rather than desperation.
Where to Go From Here
The invitation in this teaching is to pause and ask yourself: What experience am I actually chasing? Name it with precision. Then ask: Is that experience actually unavailable to me right now, or do I believe it is unavailable because I don't have the external object yet? Finally, practice accessing that experience internally—not as a form of denial or spiritual bypassing, but as an experiment. If peace, freedom, or love is what you're after, can you locate it in yourself now? What would change in your relationship to pursuing external things if you discovered these states are already yours?



