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Journal

Here you’ll find my philosophical meanderings in the form of articles, essays, and occasional poetry. My interests and curiosities are broad, but the central focus remains the pursuit of what is authentic, real, and true.

Lux et veritas


The Fight

The Fight

You don’t fight to win. You fight to prevent the psychopaths from destroying everything they touch.

Immorality as Infrastructure

Immorality as Infrastructure

There is a growing inability, or perhaps unwillingness, to recognize how deeply modern culture shapes the moral and psychological condition of society. Most people move within systems they neither question nor fully perceive, absorbing values, incentives, behaviors, and narratives as though they emerged naturally rather than being carefully cultivated through institutions, markets, media, and governance itself. Yet beneath the spectacle of progress, inclusion, convenience, and endless consumption lies a deeper erosion, one that gradually disconnects human beings from responsibility, discernment, self-reliance, and ultimately from what is real and true.

The First Principle of Healing

The First Principle of Healing

What if the body never makes mistakes — and neither does life? A reflection on healing, perception, and the deeper pattern connecting individual wellbeing to the collective human experience.

True Colors

True Colors

A quiet unraveling reveals itself not in a single moment, but in the accumulation of fractures. When the systems once trusted begin to expose their nature, what remains is not only disillusionment, but a choice — to collapse with them, or to rediscover what is real.

There is No Faking It: The Price of Pretending

There is No Faking It: The Price of Pretending

We’ve been told to “fake it until we make it,” as if pretending our way through life will somehow bring us truth. But pretending has a price — one paid in authenticity, integrity, and the quiet collapse of self.

On Time: Calendars

On Time: Calendars

The calendar we use is chaotic and inconsistent, yet most of us rarely question it. We rely on devices to track time, adjusting for leap years and daylight savings without a second thought. But what if this flawed system is causing confusion and disconnection from nature? Perhaps it’s time to reconsider how we measure and experience time.