
We tend to examine the world like an old time scientist that sought to prove the theorem of the day throughout his entire life. We look at a linear equation and try to look for a missing variable that makes sense of what we see in front of us. We see a solid wall, a chair, a desk and buildings and make the theory that they are build of solid materials and that they are what we see with our eyes. Modern science is agreeing that what we actually see is a mass of energy working to make a solid object that looks how we perceive it and want it to be. We strive to fit solids together like a dove tailed joint so that we can have a dimensional understanding of them.
We also do the same with our beliefs and emotional responses. We strive to make sense of the world and make it reflect what we believe about it. The last decade has been a fear based emotional upheaval for the United States and the world as a whole. We have politicians that reflect that fear and have preyed on that very visceral emotional response to govern our country and engage the rest of the world. A fear based theory of looking at life will reflect in our everyday outlook on life and make solid the energy of what events take place in history at the same way we create walls, chairs, desks and buildings.
In this scenario we create a fearful world and nature supplies the events that we dictate to happen, social unrest and duality of individuals and governments and even seeming natural disasters that gladly exhibit that our fears are founded and expect more to happen. With our emotions based in fear how can we not create an environment that fear increases and reflects our beliefs about the world? We have seen an increase in activism on both the political left and the right making the beliefs in a pluralistic society appears real.
We have to create a new society that understands it molds the world around us and can see how our influence, even on a small level has an impact world wide and start the process of bringing the world to a higher spiritual level, a greater plain of understanding and seeking to act as One rather than a mass of individuals looking for meaning in our wall, chairs, desks and buildings.

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