The Great Digestion: Moving From Consumption to Communion We are biological engines designed to consume…

The Great Amnesia: From the Costume of Rebellion to the Heart of Remembrance
The Great Amnesia: From the Costume of Rebellion to the Heart of Remembrance
But there are always those who question the script. These are the souls who choose to walk their truth with their hearts on their sleeves, minds open to new realities. Yet, instead of being celebrated for their courage, they are often punished. They face judgment, isolation, and resistance until they face the ultimate choice: retreat into the safety of the crowd, or forge the steel of true individuality.
This struggle is not just a social dynamic; it is an evolutionary filter. And in our modern world, it has become harder to navigate because we have confused looking unique with being unique.
The Trap: Monkey See, Monkey Do
Society has realized that it cannot fully suppress the human urge for individuality. So, instead of suppressing it, it often commercializes it.
We see this when “rebellion” becomes a market segment—a clothing style, a brand, a curated digital aesthetic. This is the “Monkey See, Monkey Do” trap.
In this mode, we claim the title of “individual,” living a loud, egoic-styled life, yet we are paradoxically unable to accept another’s right or worthiness to be or do the same. We mimic the appearance of the outlier without doing the internal work of the outlier. We chase the appearance of distinction, failing to recognize that we are already a unique beam of light in the spectrum of consciousness that in-forms our reality.
The Tool, Not the Tyrant: Reclaiming Currency
It is easy to look at the state of the world—the billionaires, the poverty, the consumerism—and label money or commerce as “evil.” But this is a misunderstanding of the truth.
Currency is simply energy. Commerce is simply exchange. Like technology, they are neutral tools—amplifiers of our intent. They are not the enemy; unconsciousness is.
The problem arises when we lose sight of the relationship between Causation and Effect.
- When we engage in commerce with unconscious causation (greed, insecurity, the need to dominate), the effect is pollution, poverty, and extraction.
- When we engage in commerce with conscious awareness (service, circulation, value creation), the effect is abundance, innovation, and support.
We must not reject the tool; we must elevate the hand that holds it. We can have a prosperous world, but only if that prosperity is rooted in the “Whole Truth”—recognizing that true wealth is not just what we extract from the system, but what we circulate within it.
The Illusion of the Disposable Tribe (and Planet)
This lack of awareness is amplified by the global network, which creates a dangerous illusion: that our families, friends, neighbors—and even the Planet itself—are disposable.
Because we can find instantaneous validation from strangers online, we begin to view the friction in our local relationships as unworthy of our energy. We begin to think, “If they don’t get it, I can just block them.” We apply this same logic to nature: if a forest is in the way of profit, we remove it.
But this mindset fractures the foundation of existence. A relationship, a community, or a civilization depends on the participation of everyone—including the Earth.
We often treat the Planet as a silent stage for our human drama, but it is the primary participant. If the soil, the water, and the air withdraw their participation, the show ends. When we treat the people who challenge us or the environment that sustains us as disposable, the structural integrity of life collapses. We cannot build a unified reality if we only participate with those who mirror our ego.
The Myth of Progress: The Illusion of Control
Our amnesia regarding “Causation and Effect” explains why we are the only species on Earth who kill in the name of “progress.”
We suffer from the delusion that nature is controllable. We believe we can manage uncertainty not by adapting to the rhythm of life, but by taking actions against it. This delusion manifests in the heartbreaking ironies of our modern life:
- We buy books on minimalism, accumulating more clutter just to learn how to have less.
- We purchase gadgets that promise ease, yet they often poison our biology with artificial frequencies and disconnect us from the natural world.
- We destroy the vital information in our food, processing it until the nutrient density and energetic intelligence our bodies need to sustain themselves is gone—all in the name of “convenience” or “shelf life.”
We ignore the wisdom of past ones—the ancient cycles and lessons that governed life long before we arrived. A lion kills to eat; a wolf kills to protect the pack. They kill for survival. Humans are the only species that kills for ideas. We display qualities nowhere else found in the natural world: malice, greedy accumulation, and pollution.
We invented possession—the strange idea that a part of the Earth can belong to a person rather than the person belonging to the Earth. Pollution is another uniquely human invention. In nature, there is no waste; everything is food for something else. Pollution is the physical manifestation of a spiritual blockage—it is what happens when we create effects without honoring the causes, producing things the Mother Planet cannot digest.
The Crucible: The First Monkey
The tragedy is not that we are evil; it is that we are asleep. The solution is not to fight the system, but to wake up within it. This brings us to the “Hundredth Monkey” phenomenon.
True individuality—the kind that shifts reality—is found in the lonely phase of the First Monkey. When the young macaque named Imo began washing her sweet potatoes, she wasn’t doing it for an audience. She was doing it because it was a higher truth.
She endured the ignore-ance of the tribe until the vibration of that truth became too strong to ignore. She reached critical mass.
The Return: Remembering the Heart
The goal is not to be a contrarian who rejects everyone, nor a conformist who accepts everything. It is to develop the capabilities and capacity to choose when to lead, when to pause, and when to follow.
- To Lead means to be the first to stop killing for progress and start creating for life.
- To Pause means to stand in the stillness of discernment. To consult the higher source and check your internal compass before the ego reacts.
- To Follow means to recognize wisdom in others and support it without losing your identity.
We must stop measuring our worth by the external metrics of the crowd—followers, money, resources—while ignoring the internal truth of how those things were acquired. We must return to the heart of the matter: being human.
When we stop performing for the gallery and start listening to the higher source that lives beyond our preferences and performances, we realize that nothing is disposable. We realize that currency is a tool for love, technology is a tool for connection, and the Planet is a partner to be cherished, not controlled.
In that alignment, we finally show the world what true love looks like: it is the courage to break the chain of conformity while keeping the chain of humanity—and nature—intact.
Are you ready to remember?
We are gathering those who are done with the costume of rebellion and are ready for the work of remembrance. If you are tired of the illusion of separation and ready to recognize yourself as a unique beam of light in a shared spectrum, join us.
Let’s write a new script together.
