About the Author
Chokh Di, the Buddhist name for “Lucky,” was bestowed by his mentor — the Abbot of a Theravāda temple — as a gentle reminder that grace had accompanied him long before he ever knew its name, a quiet testament to the light that had threaded itself through his life like a hidden stream. He is a writer, metaphysical thinker, and lifelong seeker of the hidden architecture that connects consciousness, creation, and the patterns that shape human experience. Drawing from philosophy, physics, comparative religion, and personal inquiry, his work bridges the scientific and the sacred through a unified vision of reality.
Rather than proposing belief systems, Chokh Di seeks to illuminate the underlying structures through which reality becomes personal.
His writing invites readers to look inward—not for doctrine, but for resonance; not for certainty, but for deeper awareness of how consciousness renders the world each of us experiences, and how, throughout human history, this has shaped our views and relationships with our personal gods.
Through this work, he hopes to offer a bridge between science, metaphysics, and the timeless human desire to understand our place in the greater unfolding — our relationship with the omnipotent Presence: our God.