The world doesn’t stay saved
In the last few hundred years, people have saved the world many times.
From World Wars to Nuclear wars, the stakes have been supremely high many times.
The act of saving the world is not a one-time job. It is a forever commitment.
Each iteration is different, and possibly increasingly complex and important. Catastrophic climate breakdown, the rogue use of advanced technology that can take out 100% of life, leadership sunk into the depths of biblical, vengeful hell, a financial system that devours everything to thrive, and the yet-to-be-seen pathogens that make a previous pandemic look like a picnic in the park.
Against the entropic forces of people who seek to use, abuse, exploit, take, hurt and kill, in a system that is designed to reward that behaviour, we have the countervailing force of Syntropy. Towards love. Beauty. Grace. Regeneration. Kindness.
There is a simple choice that few recognise.
Towards entropy is like a nasty contagion – the infection is cruel to self, the deep isolation and loneliness are real, the unsatiated longing for connection and love the forever hungry ghost of actions, happiness squeezed into husks.
Towards Syntropy is connection, belonging, meaning, purposeful, kindness to self and others, beauty, joy, and a healthy future.
It is no surprise that our Molochian entropic system fails to measure, or even consider, the personal and future costs of itself on itself. If it did it would see clearly its extinction.
You and I can always choose. Do we animate the entropic?
Or is it towards Syntropy that we move?
In every single action, every single response. Every single choice. Remembering that the tools of Molochian entropy are the substrate of all of our existence. Monetary. Banking. Finance. Legal Codes. Enterprise design. Accounting for value.
Towards Syntropy is towards joy and life. Happiness. Health -physical, emotional, mental, spiritual.
If we are going to once again save the world, and the jury is out if that is even possible, then we might dig deep into the Syntropic toolkit.
Photo Taken December 25th 2024, Article written December 25th 2024