To ask “What is the meaning of life?” is just like asking “What is the meaning of a flower?”.
“What is the purpose of life?” can be answered in simple biological terms as “the purpose of life is to produce further life.”.

In Unithou, we say that the purpose of life is to cultivate vitality, which results in health and enjoyment, and genuine love, as opposed to dependency or attachment. The devotee is to worship none other than her/his own unique divinity and image, while recognising and respecting the unique divinity of the other.

It’s acknowledged that it is not meaning that we long for, but the unique experience of divinity, a self-discovery, of sorts, which is not an enduring experience, and one which cannot be communicated with the use of everyday terminology. Any so called “truth” realised in the way of words or images can be expressed to others, but at best, only in an abstract way, and it is recognised that, since the viewer/listener did not have the same unique experience, that at best they can only imagine it, or have blind faith in the words or images presented to them. For those seeking the truth, to read, or hear about it from others can imprint their minds with expectations of what they are supposed to experience, thus, distancing Unithou, and disempowering the individual.

If we use the analogy of the treasure hunt, we can think of the treasure as the truth. It’s an arduous adventure to find the treasure, and that moment of discovery is beyond description. The longer the treasure is held onto, the more it weighs the individual down. (S)he begins to protect it, and wonders what will happen if it is lost.
“The hunt is better than the kill”, as they say.

Some say “there is no truth”, but in Unithou it’s acknowledged that there is a pervading truth, and this truth is fleeting and multidimensional, and that one can, in fact, find an element of truth in any view/philosophy/interpretation. So the truth is that there are many truths, and the experience of Unithou is experienced in the moment of discovery itself, which comes about by way of the adventure we either opt for, or simply find ourselves drawn into, whether we like it or not.

Unithou is the unique encounter with one’s divinity.
Truth is dynamic, like a sliding scale: what is true for one instance, may be untrue for another.
This is why moral dogma doesn’t work.

The fourth 21st Century commandment states:
“Thou shalt endeavour to invest thy time and energy cultivating health, intelligence, creativity, experience, relationships, and consciousness”.
In this way one becomes the artist of one’s own life, and cultivates vitality, in order to best experience the adventure of adversity, and encounter the profoundly fleeting truth in so, so many ways.