The Entity Feeds on Ignorance

There is an intersection between the physical body and the spirit. In this place between them, there’s an entity—a force we don’t fully understand. It’s from this space that chaos and destruction arise, feeding on what’s unseen and misunderstood. We need to bring the unseen into the light.

"Why is nobody doing anything?"—a question asked during the tragedies of Bosnia and Rwanda, and sadly, it's just as relevant today. Why isn't anyone doing anything? Why does history continue to repeat itself?

Religions have grown from thousands to millions, even billions of followers. In the material world, we’ve uncovered more knowledge than we know what to do with. More discoveries. More growth. More understanding. And yet, here we are. While the evolution of technology is undeniable, the evolution of humanity? That remains questionable. It feels incomplete, as though we are missing half of the equation.

We can embrace both the material and the spiritual, but unless we explore the layers of our minds and hearts, the merry-go-round will continue. On the surface, things may seem different, but scratch just below, and it’s clear: the same script, different actors.

Our obsession with either the material or the spiritual blinds us to what lies between. And this obsession does nothing to foster a healthy, balanced humanity. The entity, the unseen force, will continue to wreak havoc until we learn to see what we currently cannot. To do that, we must first remove the blinds of ignorance.

To start, we can look at our relationship with our ego and our sexual energy. These are two areas demonized by one or more religions, creating a distorted relationship with both. Suppression of our sexual energy cuts off our creativity and our connection to this planet, as well as to the source. Similarly, demonizing the ego disconnects us from our power, which resides in the solar plexus. A healthy ego helps us deliver our work and maintain a balanced connection with both self and Self.

When sexual energy is suppressed, creativity—the core of our humanity—suffers. Creativity and self-expression live between the physical and spiritual realms, and when out of balance, they disrupt our relationship to both. This imbalance leaves us vulnerable, open to manipulation by the entity that thrives on separation and disconnection. The weakness within us feeds it. Separation on the outside begins within each of us.

Humanity has become—or perhaps has always been—ignorant. Ignorance is the antithesis to the evolution of love for all beings, regardless of race, religion, or culture. It’s this ignorance that contributes to the collective state of the world today.

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The Insatiable Entity

Resistance to suppression is not terrorism; it is the path to freedom.

The convenient use of war vs. terrorism by those in power.

The idea that there is a terrorizer and the terrorized.

Who decides who is what?

You?

Me?

Another?

Labels conveniently provided by those in power.

Let's get clear on what freedom means. Let's begin to question this illusion of democracy. If democracy requires one to be superior over the other, that some must suffer for me and you to be in a "democratic" system, then no thank you.

There must be another way.

Either at its core, democracy is a failed ideology or democracy had good intentions but, like all religions, has been hijacked by layers and layers of ideologies by the manipulative suppressors in power.

Power is simply a being, but at its core resides an entity. To view those in power solely in a physical sense is to miss the entity itself.

You can destroy the physical, but the entity will find another victim to take hold of and do its work.

This entity feeds off of the unhealed traumas of humanity.

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Weapons and Pornography. Is it just Good Business?

Have you ever wondered why we constantly talk about how the world is in turmoil, how humans kill everything, including each other, yet no one seems to mention the weapons manufacturers and dealers? I believe the world is filled with much more good than bad, but the media loves to cater to our primitive brains, and we willingly consume it.

It’s fascinating that there’s rarely any coverage on where the weapons responsible for millions of deaths are actually coming from. All these weapons must be coming from somewhere, right?

Imagine if I owned a weapons manufacturing company, which, according to Google, is a five hundred billion-dollar industry. How invested would I be in world peace? What’s my marketing strategy to move everything from bullets to tanks and fighter jets? What motivates me as a weapons manufacturer? I’d be thrilled for wars and instability. Peace, after all, is bad for business. Love is bad for business. But instability and chaos? That keeps the money flowing.

Now, let’s think about pornography. While it’s not as massive as the weapons industry, it’s still a multi-billion-dollar industry. They produce, and we consume.

If we take ethics out of the conversation for a moment, are the pharmaceutical, oil, insurance, and education industries any different? The products and services may vary, but the systems keeping them afloat are nearly identical. They sell, and we buy. We actively contribute to these systems.

So, what do we do? Do we raise the white flag and say, "I’m just one person; what can I possibly do? I’ll never break the system. It’s too big." Or do we fight? Do we protest, picket, and expose their crimes to the world?

Both are fair positions, but they share one common outcome: neither leads to lasting change.

What if we approached this differently? Let’s move from a macro to a micro level. Let’s look at you and me and our habits. Habits are pathways wired in our brains. I learned in Positive Psychology that existing pathways can’t be destroyed, but we can create new ones parallel to the old. The more we walk the new path, the weaker the old one becomes.

Here’s where I’m going with this. I like to use smoking as an example because I smoked for almost twenty-five years. Fifteen of those years, I struggled with quitting and restarting. I had many pathways and triggers that led me to light up. One was driving. Every time I drove, especially in traffic, I would smoke. To change that habit, I didn’t try to break the pathway (well, at first I did). Instead, I replaced it. I drank coffee, water, or tea while driving instead of smoking. Eventually, the new pathway became stronger, and I succeeded in quitting.

As bad as these systems—war, pornography, or any other—are, our feelings alone won’t change them. These pathways are too strong and deeply ingrained.

What is possible, however, is countering them by creating new systems. Trying to break the old pathways from the top down results in zero long-term change.

It’s time to create new pathways and systems from the ground up, understanding that we may never witness the results. But we must trust that it’s worth the effort.

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