The nature of reality

The potent truth hides in plain sight. My true creator self is everywhere I look, talking to my lost self of awakening. When I search for “the nature of reality”, I now receive this:

Reality is the sum or aggregate of all that is real or existent within a system, as opposed to that which is only imaginary.

I accept this definition. Reality is that which is “real” as opposed to that which is “only imaginary”. However, some additional clarifications are required. What is real? And what is only imaginary?

The literal answer is also the best: “real” constitutes what is palpable, sensational, but most importantly, presently and directly experienced. “Imaginary” is everything else, even those beliefs I know to be palpable, sensational, and experiential if I do something to make them so.

The real is the non-imaginary, which means reality is constrained to my moment. Anything that is non-present, even if I believe I experienced it only seconds before or will experience in seconds to come, is therefore no longer part of reality because it is imaginary.

Essentially, my previous conception that reality is a fixed, static thing through which I am moving is wrong. Reality is my fixed moment, not my ever-changing secondself and thirdself sensations, whether thoughts or forms. The part that does not change, and comprises reality, is my moment. The part that I imagine changes and is in motion, is not reality.

Reality is the sum or aggregate of all that is real or existent within a system, as opposed to that which is only imaginary. The only constant that does not change within the system I call existence is my present moment. The contents of that present moment, whether thoughts, feelings, and desires, or physical people, places, and things, are the imaginary unreal.