“Everything should be as simple as it can be, but not simpler.”
— Albert Einstein
I’ve found that life can be optimized with respect to a minimum of seven areas. Delete any one of them from the equations of your awareness and your life will degrade, sooner or later. Since these areas are irreducible I call them the Seven Matters of Life. They are: Personal, Health, Spiritual, Business, Family, Law, & Government.
The Seven Matters exert an inevitable, if not invisible, influence on our lives. As with natural laws describing gravity, time, the speed of light, etc. they persist whether we ignore them or not. We “escape” them only through acknowledgement and mastery.
My writing is an informational vortex swirling around the Seven Matters. Ideally, it serves as a generational boost to reduce the time needed to put your own life on optimal track.
A Portrait of the Seven Matters
To portray the seven matters I’ll use a pattern-type at the core of natural design: Fractals. Before fractals were discovered, Hollywood was unable to reproduce mountain landscapes without using artist renderings or real pictures of mountains. Now, they use triangles, a computer, and a dash of randomness to create breathtaking landscapes.
The point of using a fractal to portray the seven matters of life is this:
Fractals prove that stupefying complexity can emerge from utter simplicity. The reverse is not true.
Also, I want to make a point, graphically, about the nature of optimizing one’s life:
Even when a complex solution is needed it will inevitably be constructed with simple (not simplistic) components.
The Metatron Cube
One of my favorite fractals is the metatron cube, sometimes referred to as “the flower of life”. It’s formed with 13 spheres set in relation to each other, like this:

Within the metatron cube are many other shapes. For example, it contains all five platonic solids.
In this revolving view the cubic relationships of the same fractal are emphasized.
Fractals can represent infinity by putting the same fractal within itself. Here’s what a metatron cube looks like with each sphere filled with its own metatron cube:
Working Portrait
Please don’t mistake the colorful portrait, below, as “New Age” philosophy with its nauseating relativism. To the contrary, it’s a working portrait of the seven matters at the core of each person. Though we’re all unique, and at differing levels of development, our design is specific and persistent.

Notice these aspects of the portrait:
- The seven inner-spheres of the core correspond closely to the seven matters of life.
- The “matter” at the center is Spirit; a reference to the spirit inside you and to God.
- Each sphere is a fractal identical to the others, and to the whole.
- The outer spheres represent personal interactions with the external world. They are the natural outward reach stemming from the inner core.
- To the extent the inner-core is balanced, so is the person, and so are interactions with the external world.
Everyone has these “matters” in their life, in one formation or another. My choice of their positions is, therefore, a kind of self-portrait. Change the position of the “matters”, especially the one in the core, and the resulting life of the person will be quite different.
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