Whether we call it the collective unconscious, bhavanga or the holographic universe with its ocean of energy whose original non-material forms precede the physical part of reality in consciousness, which can be described mathematically with Fourier transforms. They all have in common that they are different ways of describing experiences we have of psychic energy on an underlying level that our external senses are unable to perceive. Something that has also been described in works on quantum chemistry as the content of the information that lies behind a non-empirical realm of the universe that doesn’t consist of material things but of forms, and these forms can appear as physical structures in the external world. An experience of consciousness as part of the transformation of energy, and whose content, when unfolded through our understanding of the information that serves as its envelope, is what makes us perceive consciousness not only as energy but also as information, and which, once expanded beyond itself, gives rise to the reality of matter in a holographic universe. Inuit Eskimos describe this experience as Silap Inua, the spirit that lives in everything. Who separates everything but who still holds everything together in the same way. He is intelligence, the order of everything, and the world itself. In Sami it is the experience of Rádienáhttje and the Sáivu world within the world. Australian Aborigines holds the perception that meaning and information are not conveyed across time and space, but are an integral part of consciousness that expresses itself in spatial order and in form. All above have in common that they create an existential union between the tangible in physical reality, and the psychological and meditative experiences, from which it arises and has its origin beyond the capacity of our external senses. Which connects everything across time and space and is the background we communicate with and maintain, of which we have personal custody through the nature of which we are an experiential and integrated holographic part. The holographic perspective, applied to both traditional experiences and contemporary scientific ones, makes it possible to embrace a reality that expands beyond the confines of the external senses and the intellectual barriers of indefinability.