Book I · The Divine Journey Trilogy
The Journey of Self Discovery
The doorway in.
The opening book of the trilogy. A quiet examination of the inherited self, and the simplest question we forget to ask: who am I, underneath everything I have been told I am?
Buy on Amazon Read the first chapter
Amazon link is direct — David does not earn affiliate commission.
About this book
The first book in the Divine Karma trilogy by David Ramirez is the doorway into the work. It begins not with grand statements about awakening, but with the smallest, most ordinary question: who am I, underneath everything I have been told I am?
Most of us inherited our beliefs about ourselves before we were old enough to choose them. We were named, sorted, taught, praised, and punished into a self that we then carried, mostly unexamined, for decades. This book is a long, gentle conversation about setting some of that down. Not in a dramatic way. In a daily way.
The book reframes karma as the slow accumulation of belief and action over time, not as cosmic reward or punishment. It treats the inner work as a quiet practice, not a peak experience. And it holds religion, science, and philosophy as three lenses on the same truth, without forcing them to compete.
If you are new to the trilogy, this is where to begin. If you have read widely in this genre, you already know the difference between a book that hands you certainty and a book that hands you a mirror. This is the second kind.
What you will find inside
- The reframing of karma as the slow accumulation of belief and action — not punishment, not fate.
- The Trinity of Truth: religion, science, and philosophy held side by side as three lenses on the same questions.
- Quiet practices for noticing inherited beliefs and softening them without contempt.
- An opening into the trilogy's longer arc: self-inquiry → awakening → homecoming.
For whom this book is written
- Readers new to spiritual writing who want a voice that does not sell certainty.
- Long-time readers of Eckhart Tolle, Michael A. Singer, or Don Miguel Ruiz who want a contemporary, conversational companion.
- Anyone navigating a quiet midlife question about who they were told to be versus who they actually are.
- Skeptical readers who want spiritual writing that does not insult their intelligence.
Continue the journey
Book II: A Journey Towards Enlightenment
The middle stretch. Awakening as gradual unlearning, the masks we wear, and the courage of setting one down.