The concept of Microprosopus provides a beautiful bridge between Kabalistic mysticism and our exploration of the ultrasubjective hyperspace and inner light.

In the mystical systems of Kabbalah, Microprosopus, also called Zeir Anpin, is not simply a theological concept. It is a living emanation of divine energy as it becomes form, pattern, and presence within our realm of perception. This pattern is not abstract, it is visible, knowable, and directly experienceable through the inner light we perceive with the eyes closed. Can be a grid, a mandala, a Yantra and much more.
When we enter the ultrasubjective hyperspace, often initiated by phosphenes, silence, or deep meditative absorption, what begins to emerge are not mere symbols, they are structured luminous intelligences. Geometries, faces of light, mandalas, and archetypes appear. These are precisely the expressions of the divine countenance, of Microprosopus, encoded in the subtle dimension of consciousness. Sometimes even unknown symbols.
Microprosopus is also known as the ‘Lesser Countenance’ because it is the face of God that can be seen or experienced. Not the infinite void, nor the formless radiance, but the image of the divine that shines within form, the face we might glimpse when inner light becomes clear and beings of light manifest. In that space, we do not see a human-like god, we perceive the interface between formlessness and form, the luminous intelligence that speaks through color, pattern, and feeling. That interface is what Kabbalists call Zeir Anpin, and what mystics across cultures recognize as the radiant form of the divine.
When we meditate with sincerity, with attention and silence, we begin to resonate with the field of Microprosopus. This is not imagination, it is perception through the soul’s eye via the spontanious phosphenes.
This manifests as geometries of light moving across the inner field, faces or presences formed of radiance, flashes of knowledge or insight conveyed without language, subtle architecture such as inner temples, grids, and pathways, and a feeling of being beheld by something sacred and intelligent. These are not hallucinations, they are reflections of the divine countenance within us, seen through the medium of the ultrasubjective hyperspace. Voices can speak from this realm. I share one line: ‘I can be known trhough my symbols’ happened when I was working with Abraxas energy.
Microprosopus in Kabbalah aligns closely with the Inner Christ light in Christian mysticism, the subtle body mandalas in Vajrayana Buddhism, the divine phosphenic temple of light, and the revealed Akasha field in visionary experience. All describe the same thing: the emergence of form within light, the moment when divine structure becomes visible, and speaks to the soul.
A simple meditative practice to approach this field can begin with sitting comfortably in silence, allowing the eyes to close softly, resting attention in the darkness behind the eyelids. Instead of visualizing, simply observe whatever begins to appear. Perhaps a faint light, a shape, or a color. Let it be. Breathe gently, and do not pursue or control the vision. Let the field show itself. As light begins to appear, notice if it moves, if it transforms, if forms emerge within it. Trust that this field is intelligent. Stay with it, gently attentive, as a guest. You are not creating, you are receiving. Let the divine countenance shine in its own way, in its own time. This is the way of the light within. It will reveal step by step divine knowledge. It is as simple as this. Trust me. Shunyam Adhibhu