A tree survives storms because of its roots, not because it fights every gust of wind.
Think about it.
If you understand you are the observer of your life, you will then realize you aren’t just reacting to reality.
You’re are participating in reality.
You can question it.
You can refuse it.
You can change your relationship to it.
It’s obvious we are waking up to overlords and institution that wants control, in which they project “power over and power under” realities that create the opposite:
That you are small.
That you are late.
That you are powerless.
That you are merely a consumer of outcomes.
They try to pull attention away from creation and into reaction.
Your business grows through creation.
Anxiety grows through reaction.
The power struggle (and how to opt out)
If you can get people to outsource their perception, then you can guide their choices.
So the first battlefield is attention.
If you can keep attention fragmented, then self-observation becomes difficult.
If you can keep people overstimulated, then inner clarity feels impossible.
If you can keep them exhausted, then reflection looks like “luxury.”
And when reflection becomes rare, then the observer in neutrality goes missing.
The invisible rule: “Top Down vs Bottom Up.”
If you can convince someone that only approved narratives are valid, then their own direct experiences are doubted and suspect.
Intuition becomes “irrational.”
Pattern recognition becomes “paranoia.”
Spiritual insight becomes “cringe.”
Even emotional truth becomes “overreacting.”
So one stops trusting what they see.
And when you no longer trusts your perception, you become governable.
Divide-and-conflict: turn observation into freedom
If the old global elite force us to compare identities instead of examining systems, then the system stays invisible.
So attention is pushed into constant social struggle:
Who’s right.
Who’s safe.
Who’s winning.
Who’s to blame.
And if the crowd is busy fighting horizontally, then power can operate vertically without being noticed.
The “OBJECTIVE” is a result
If you slip out of being conscious as a (first) observer from the equation, then you can be managed like a object.
If you are managed like objects, then you’ll accept being spoken to like a object.
And if that becomes normal, then the cornerstone remains “rejected”—not because it lacks power, but because its power threatens the architecture.
The reversal (reclaiming the cornerstone)
If you bring the observer back online, then the spell weakens.
If you practice noticing—without immediately obeying what you notice—then you regain inner space.
If you regain inner space, then you regain choice.
And if you regain choice, then the cornerstone is no longer rejected.
It becomes what it always was:
The point of observation.
The point of creation.
The point from which the whole structure can be rebuilt.
REAL LIFE EXAMPLES | Are you at risk?
Again, if you recognize you are the observer, then you notice how your attention, beliefs, and choices shape life.
1) Attention capture: keep you too distracted to notice
Real-world examples:
* Infinite scroll + autoplay: designed to keep you consuming without a natural stopping point.
* Push notifications: training you to respond on cue rather than choose intentionally.
* Outrage algorithms: content that spikes anger/fear travels further, so platforms reward it.
* 24/7 “breaking news”: a constant urgency loop that makes reflection feel irresponsible.
If your nervous system is constantly activated, then your ability to step back and witness your own mind gets weaker.
2) Information overload: drown the observer in noise
Real-world examples:
* Conflicting headlines on the same event, each claiming certainty.
* Endless expert takes, threads, podcasts, hot takes—more input than one person can metabolize.
* “Context collapse” on social media: complex issues forced into simplistic posts.
If everything feels equally urgent, then you stop trusting your own judgment.
Then you look for someone to tell you what to think.
3) Narrative gating: only “approved reality” is treated as valid
Real-world examples:
* Workplace cultures where disagreement quietly harms your career.
* Social environments where asking basic questions is treated as moral failure.
* Public shaming dynamics: one wrong phrase becomes proof you’re unsafe.
* Media incentives that reward conformity to a storyline more than nuance.
If you can punish curiosity, then you can prevent observation.
If you can prevent observation, then you can maintain control.
4) Status worship: replace inner authority with external permission
Real-world examples:
* People deferring to “experts” even for personal decisions that require self-knowledge (relationships, values, meaning).
* “Citation culture” used as a weapon: not to improve truth, but to end conversation.
* Institutional language that makes ordinary people feel unqualified to speak.
Experts matter.
But if expertise becomes a tool to silence lived experience, then people become dependent.
5) Economic pressure: keep people too tired to think
Real-world examples:
* Multiple jobs, gig work, unpredictable schedules.
* Debt-driven life decisions.
* Burnout normalized as “ambition.”
* Healthcare and childcare stress that drains long-term planning.
If you’re exhausted, then you’ll accept whatever reduces friction today—even if it costs you tomorrow.
That’s not a personal failure.
That’s a predictable outcome of stress.
6) Identity conflict: horizontal fighting keeps vertical power invisible
Real-world examples:
* Culture wars that keep attention on symbols and tribes instead of incentives and policy.
* Online discourse that rewards dunking over understanding.
* Workplace politics where coworkers compete for scarcity instead of questioning the system.
If people argue about who’s “good,” then fewer people ask who benefits.
7) Metrics and performance: turn humans into dashboards
Real-world examples:
* Social media likes/follows as a proxy for truth or value.
* Productivity tools used to squeeze output rather than support wellbeing.
* Corporate KPIs that encourage short-term wins and punish long-term thinking.
* Schools and testing that reward compliance and memorization more than insight.
If your identity becomes performance, then observation becomes threatening.
Because observation might reveal you’re not living your life—just managing a score.
In the end….
If observation returns, then choice returns.
And when choice returns, the power struggle shifts.
Because the observer is no longer missing.
Kassandra
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