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Over the past few weeks I have had the same conversation with many different people. Friends, clients, parents at school events, strangers who stop me after a talk. The topic is always the same: the state of the world.

Another war appears in the news. Political tensions rise. Economists warn about instability. The questions people ask me are simple and sincere.

Is the world falling apart? Where are we heading? What are we supposed to do about all of this?

These questions matter because war is real and the suffering it brings is real. For years I have spoken openly about the tragedy of men playing war, while the true cost is paid by women, children, and young men who are sent to fight battles that are rarely their own.

So when people feel uneasy about what is happening globally, I understand it. I feel it too.

But the longer I observe what is happening around us, the more convinced I become that the greatest battle of our time is not happening between countries.

It is happening inside people.

Most of us are fighting a quiet war for our attention, and we do not even realize it.

Human beings are not built to absorb the amount of information we now consume every day. News alerts arrive by the minute, social media feeds never end, and opinions are stacked on top of opinions until it becomes almost impossible to think clearly about anything.

The result is simply a mental chaos.

People are anxious, reactive, and exhausted. Families argue about issues they barely understand. Friendships break over headlines that will be forgotten in a week. Many of us spend more time following the drama of the world than paying attention to the small, real details of our own lives.

The problem is not only distraction. The deeper problem is that constant consumption leaves no room for creation.

Every person I have ever worked with carries some form of creative potential. It may be raising thoughtful children, building a meaningful business, writing, teaching, helping others, or simply bringing kindness and intelligence into a community. But creativity requires attention, and attention has become the most stolen resource of our time.

The more noise we absorb, the harder it becomes to hear our own thoughts and the whispers of your own soul. Eventually people begin to feel lost, not because they lack purpose, but because their inner voice has been buried under endless input.

There is also something else we rarely discuss. Human beings affect each other emotionally far more than we like to admit. When someone is angry or unstable, the whole room feels it and our nervous systems react to one another constantly.

When millions of people are living in a constant state of agitation and distraction, that energy spreads through families, workplaces, and communities. Personal chaos slowly becomes cultural chaos and global chais. It’s a form a virus, an energetic one.

This is why protecting your attention is no longer a small lifestyle choice. It is a form of responsibility.

In my own home we have a simple rule. At a certain hour in the evening the phones go away, we turn off screens and the house becomes quiet again. We talk, read, and prepare for the next day.

It sounds almost trivial, but those quiet hours restore something modern life keeps taking from us: a regulated nervous system and a clear mind.

The world may remain unstable for some time and NONE of us has full control over those forces.

What we do have control over is the state of our own mind.

The future will need people who can think clearly, stay calm, and resist the emotional storms that sweep through society. That kind of stability does not come from consuming more information but from creating moments of stillness where clarity can return.

So if there is one small experiment worth trying, it is this. Put the phone down earlier tonight. Step outside. Sit quietly long enough to hear your own thoughts again.

Beneath the noise, something important is still there. Never left us….

Your attention. Your creativity. Your ability to bring something meaningful into the world. Most importantly- an exhale you haven’t had in a while. Less anxiety, more laughter, more joy, more AWE….

And right now, protecting that may be one of the most important things any of us can do.

Rise To More is a Twin Cities Show rooted in meaningful conversation and real transformation. This Minneapolis self-development podcast offers thoughtful dialogue for listeners who want clarity, confidence, and depth—not hype. Explore one of the most intentional Minnesota podcasts for leaders, entrepreneurs, and seekers ready to rise.



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