Consciousness, War, and Other Absurdities

By Juliana Costa

Has our society lost the ability to regulate itself without blaming others?

This is a legitimate question, in view of the absurdities that occur daily in the news, on the streets, and even in the stories that people come to tell us sometimes.

The truth is that chaos has been an attack tool used daily by all those who are not dedicated to awakening, building, and/or developing their Consciousnesses, without knowing that the first to be harmed by this are themselves.

Yes! This is because to cause a war, from its intention to its fact, it is necessary to plant, water and take care of the seed of chaos in itself; it is necessary to taste the war at breakfast, lunch and dinner; it is essential that you feel, think and be the war daily.

From war, to war and through war, however, there is no way not to experience other absurdities; after all, the degradation that war provides has an unimaginable scale and irreparable consequences.

Traumas and tragedies that accompany the war are absurdities passed on for generations, for example. And this is nothing new, but still our society insists on war, or rather, we, human beings, still insist on war.

Naturally, war arises from our discontent as to the search for satisfying our desires for distancing or approaching something or someone, but until we reach extreme violence, that is, in war, we go through a process of guilt and rejection of that guilt. We want to blame the other for a discontent of ours that we no longer have control over. That’s where the war begins as a fact.

However, before we reach this absurdity, we have infinite opportunities to awaken, develop, and build our Consciousness to the point of not only avoiding war, but mainly understanding what seeds we should and deserve to cultivate in ourselves.

This is because Consciousness is, in us, the center of strength capable of enhancing our energy of achievement. Consciousness is responsible for holding us accountable for our choices; for indicating the best way forward; and also for offering us less and less harmful paths.

However, if we choose not to give space, in ourselves, to our Consciousness, we begin to cultivate such seeds of war, watering and taking care that they grow strong, a time in which we give war the possibility of controlling ourselves. When it occurs, we take away from ourselves the possibility of regulating ourselves without blaming others, simply because the desire was not understood, the guilt was not understood, the violence was not understood, and war has already been established in ourselves.

And after the war “ends”? Well, after the war “eases”, because it does not end, other absurdities present themselves. The consequences of a war are evident, and other seeds are planted by us.

At the same time, new chances of understanding appear because Consciousness does not give up on us, even if we have momentarily given up on it.

Conscientiologist, Educator, Master in Clinical and Counseling Psychology, Neuropsychologist, Psychopedagogue, International Speaker, Researcher on the theme of Consciousness with a focus on the Human Desideratum.

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