Henry Templeman, thinker and writer about issues concerning all humankind, does not identify to any belief, faith, ideology, philosophy, or teaching. He identifies to nothing. It is from this unfiltered and unbiased point of view that he describes some of the most important things that have concerned human beings throughout history, including what is love, death, intelligence, freedom, relationship, happiness, meditation, and God. Templeman began to explore these things by first totally discarding the whole of human knowledge, opinion, and belief, in order to approach the exploration with a free and undistorted perspective. It was this first (and last) step that brought about an unexpected insight that unified all of these things into an undivided whole, revealed what brings a complete end to all forms of psychological conflict, struggle, and sorrow in a manner that does not take time and depends on nothing, and also opened the door to a field of existence outside the limitations of time and thought, which was unlimited, timeless, and therefore sacred. The diary of Henry Templeman, called "Writings", contains the first series of entries about this extraordinary insight, all the things that streamed, and continue to stream, out of it, and what it means for anyone to come upon what he calls "the sacred other". The diary contains 500 entries, which are numbered, random, and reflect the personal notes, observations, and experiences of Henry Templeman.