Where is God?

Where Is God? A Journey Beyond Flesh, Matter, and the Illusion of the Final Particle

We often ask a simple yet profound question: Where is God?

But strangely, we rarely go deep enough to explore what we ourselves are made of.

Humans are made of bones and flesh—this is what we see, touch, and identify with. But has anyone truly paused to ask: What are these bones and flesh made of?

Science has spent centuries trying to answer this. Scientists have dedicated their lives to finding the most fundamental building block of existence—the smallest indivisible particle inside atoms and cells.

But let’s think deeper.

What if we actually found such a particle—something that cannot be divided any further?

If something cannot be broken down, it becomes eternal. Why? Because it cannot be reduced or destroyed. At the same time, it cannot be created either—because creation itself implies assembling smaller parts. But if this is already the smallest, there is nothing left to assemble.

That would make this “last particle” both uncreated and indestructible—eternal.

Sounds logical, right?

But here’s where the contradiction begins.

If such indivisible particles truly existed in the way we imagine, then everything we destroy—burn, break, or dissolve—should ultimately leave behind these final solid particles. Given the billions of atoms and cells around us, the world should be filled with these indestructible remnants.

But that’s not what we observe.

This leads us to a deeper realization:

Maybe the idea of a final, solid, indivisible particle itself is flawed.

Instead of reaching a final “thing,” science keeps discovering newer layers—smaller particles, deeper structures. It’s as if reality doesn’t end at a point, but continues endlessly.

Not towards a smallest object…
but towards infinity.

So what truly lies at the foundation of everything?

Not a solid particle—but an underlying presence.

An energy.

A continuous, infinite field that exists within everything.

When you burn something, its form changes—but something always remains. Not a particle you can hold, but energy that transforms. This aligns with a fundamental truth:

Energy cannot be created or destroyed—it only changes form.

Now pause and reflect.

What if this infinite, ever-present energy is the closest reality we have to what people call “God”?

Not a figure.
Not a place.
Not an object.

But an infinite underlying existence that is present in everything, everywhere.

You can call it God.
You can call it eternal energy.
Or you can call it simply reality.

Names don’t matter.

What matters is this:

There is something that exists beyond form, beyond division, beyond creation and destruction.
Something that does not begin and does not end.

And that… might be what we’ve been searching for all along.

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