Bashar teaches that beliefs are not flat but hierarchical, organized in layers from surface to core. Bashar teaches that beliefs are not flat but hierarchical, organized in layers from surface to core. Layer 1: Surface beliefs—conscious opinions and preferences (e.g., 'I like chocolate'). Layer 2: Social beliefs—cultural programming about roles, success, and morality. Layer 3: Identity beliefs—definitions about who you are ('I am a failure,' 'I am smart'). Layer 4: Core beliefs—fundamental definitions about reality itself ('The world is dangerous,' 'Money is evil,' 'I must struggle to survive'). Layer 5: Metaphysical beliefs—your relationship to the divine, eternity, and purpose. Bashar explains that changing a surface belief has minimal impact if the core beliefs remain unchanged. The work of deep transformation is to identify and shift core beliefs, which then automatically restructures all layers above them. He provides a diagnostic question: 'If I absolutely knew this belief was false, how would my life change?' The answer reveals the scope of the belief's influence. He also notes that many core beliefs were installed before age 7 and operate below conscious awareness.
Source
Bashar channeling on The Hierarchical Structure of Belief Systems