Stop for a moment. Remove from the equation what you do, what you have, and the story you tell yourself about yourself. See what remains when you no longer hold on to roles, achievements, or expectations. What appears is not a void, but a silent question: whether your life has meaning or whether it simply moves forward, driven by inertia. Observe where that question comes from. Beyond the body you care for, the mind that thinks, and the emotions that run through you, there is something in you that seeks coherence, depth, and guidance. It is not satisfied with success, recognition, or accumulation. When ignored, emptiness appears; when confused, dissatisfaction arises; when attended to, balance begins. It is not religion or belief. It arises from a deeper and unknown place: the spiritual dimension, the most forgotten in a society focused on doing, having, and appearing. Its absence helps to explain much of the contemporary malaise and the proliferation of substitutes that promise fulfillment without offering it. These pages help to recognize that dimension, to understand why it has been relegated, and to reconnect with inner life from a clear and non-dogmatic perspective. The age of spirituality proposes another way of looking at life, of ordering priorities, and of relating to one's own existence. In this gesture, transcendence ceases to be an abstraction and begins to fill everyday experience. The real global crisis is not one of systems, but of meaning. This book points to the place where human life regains its meaning.