Thursday, April 23, 2026

The Wilcock Exit: The Death That Keeps You Looking Up

 

Image Source: Chatgpt

by Julie Telgenhoff

It started like everything does now—every channel, same tone, same framing, same emotional script. The reported death of David Wilcock wasn’t just news. It was already packaged, already interpreted, already fed back to the public as either tragedy, mental collapse, or martyrdom. And that’s where it gets interesting.

Because the moment every outlet—mainstream and alternative—lands on the same narrative arc, it stops feeling organic. It feels staged. Not necessarily the event itself, but the use of it.

What’s being missed isn’t whether he “did” or “didn’t.” That’s the trap. The endless loop of arguing over cause of death is exactly where attention gets parked. Meanwhile, the larger mechanism keeps moving quietly in the background.

Look at the structure instead.

Wilcock wasn’t just a person. He functioned as a node inside a much bigger ecosystem—the UFO Disclosure Movement. A movement that, despite being framed as grassroots rebellion, has fingerprints that trace back to top-level influence. The so-called Rockefeller Initiative wasn’t some fringe curiosity. It actively funded, organized, and shaped the direction of disclosure culture decades ago.

That matters.

Because once funding and narrative direction come from the top, what looks like a truth movement starts to resemble something else entirely: perception management.

Not to shut people up—but to aim them.

The brilliance of it is simple. Push the idea that “truth” lives out there—in the sky, in distant galaxies, in alien civilizations—and people stop looking here. They stop questioning terrestrial power, black-budget tech, underground systems, or human-led advancements that never made it into public view.

It’s not suppression. It’s redirection.

And that’s where Wilcock’s “death”—real or not—slots in perfectly.

Because now, his entire body of work gets reframed. Every failed prediction? Irrelevant. Every inconsistency? Forgotten. Instead, he becomes something more powerful in narrative terms: a silenced voice. A warning. A symbol.

That shift does three things instantly.

First, it validates everything he ever said. People don’t question a martyr—they protect the story.

Second, it amplifies the UFO narrative itself. If someone died over it, then it must matter. It must be real. It must be dangerous.

And third, it resets attention back to the same place: aliens, disclosure, off-world threats or saviors.

Right where it’s always been aimed.

From this angle, it almost doesn’t matter what actually happened to him. Whether it was mental health, manipulation, voluntary exit, or something else entirely—those details are secondary. The effect is what counts.

And the effect is working.

There’s another layer that’s harder to put into words but easy to feel. That sense of “knowing” when something doesn’t line up. Not proof. Not evidence. Just pattern recognition. The kind that doesn’t come from headlines but from watching how stories behave over time.

Events like this don’t land randomly. They arrive pre-loaded, tied into existing narratives, ready to plug into something bigger.

If you step back, it starts to look less like a single storyline and more like multiple tracks running at once. Disclosure is just one of them. Economic instability, digital systems, health narratives—they all move in parallel. Each one capable of taking center stage depending on what gains traction.

Which means the UFO angle doesn’t even need to be “true” in a literal sense.

It just needs to stay alive.

So here’s the part most people won’t sit with long enough to consider.

What if the entire disclosure movement wasn’t about revealing anything… but about keeping attention fixed on the wrong question?

What if the real pivot isn’t coming from the sky—but from somewhere much closer, much quieter, and much more human?

Then the whole thing flips.

Disclosure stops being a promise… and becomes a distraction.

Not the kind meant to hide everything—but the kind that gives you just enough to feel like you’re getting closer, while subtly steering you away from where anything real might actually sit.

If attention is constantly pulled upward—aliens, crafts, distant civilizations—then the instinct to look inward or underground never fully activates. You don’t question human capability at scale. You don’t question hidden infrastructure, advanced tech already here, or systems operating quietly in plain sight. You stay in anticipation mode.

Waiting.

That’s the key. A population waiting for revelation is a population not acting.

And if the pivot is that aliens are actually humans possessing advanced technology in the underground—not extraterrestrial—then it doesn’t need a dramatic arrival. No ships. No sky event. No cinematic moment. It unfolds through systems already being built, decisions already being made, structures already in place.

Quietly.

That kind of shift doesn’t announce itself. It integrates.

Which means the real question was never “when do they show up?”

It was always… who’s already here, and what are they doing

The shift doesn't need to announce itself because it isn't waiting for a future date. It doesn't 'integrate'—it completes. 

While the masses are anchored to the sky, waiting for a cinematic arrival that was scripted in a Rockefeller boardroom decades ago, the real pivot has already happened. The technology isn't 'coming'; it’s being used. The control system isn't 'approaching'; it’s live. 

The 'Disclosure' movement wasn't a countdown to a beginning. It was the static used to mask a conclusion. 

By the time the public realizes the 'aliens' were a terrestrial red herring, the humans behind the curtain won’t just be 'here'—they’ll be the only ones left with the keys to the kingdom. 

The question was never 'when do the aliens show up?' 

The realization is that they never left, and while we were looking for lights in the sky, they were busy with their advanced technologies building the walls of the world we’re now standing in.

Also See: 

What If the Moon Landing Was Only Part of the Story?

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Caught in the Chaos? Take the Break You Forgot You Needed

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

Life feels loud right now. Not just busy—loud. It pulls you from one emotion to another so fast you forget there’s a middle. I’ve felt it too. One minute grounded, the next pulled into everything at once.

That’s where I come back to something simple that’s kept me steady more times than I can count—the idea of rhythm. The ebb and flow. If I’m in a low, it won’t stay there. The tide turns. It always does.

But in the middle of that swing, you have to choose—do you stay plugged into the noise, or do you step out of it for a minute?

This is that step out.

Not to ignore what’s happening. Just to not let it take everything from you.

So here’s a handful of things that made me laugh, pause, or just feel a little lighter. Take what you want, leave the rest.


I came across this best black cat dad and his son, Stinky, and I swear… it’s not even just the cat. It’s the way he talks about him, like he’s part child, part best friend, part entire personality. You can feel the love in it, and somehow that makes it even funnier.

 


Then there’s this duck toy. I actually bought one for my son’s cats, and watching it play out in real life made this clip hit even harder. At first, Chester just stared at it like it made no sense. Paw half-raised, trying to figure out how treats magically appear. Next day? The thing was destroyed. Total commitment.

In this video, Snow has already figured it out. She’s basically clocked in for her shift. Lever gets pushed, snacks come out, everyone else eats… and she sneaks in like she’s gaming the system. It’s now her full time job.

     


Okay, this one… I sent to my daughter-in-law because their cat Cleo is an orange tabby, and I couldn’t not share it.

I know it’s AI. I know. But it’s Cleo in spirit—center stage, looping dance, full audience watching like she’s headlining a show. It’s ridiculous, and that’s exactly why it works.


This next one surprised me. It’s one of those clips you expect to be funny… and then it actually sounds good. Like, wait—this is a real song?

It’s weirdly impressive what can come out of something random. Cat torture turned into something you actually want to listen to. I watched it so many times, I love it.  

  


And then this one…

A guy playing guitar while alligators slowly move closer like they’re drawn to the sound. I don’t know if they love the music or if this man just has nerves of steel, but I couldn’t stop watching it.

There’s something calm about it… and slightly insane at the same time.

  


Sometimes it’s the simplest stuff that hits the hardest.

Like waking up between 2 and 4 a.m. and thinking it’s some deep spiritual moment… only to realize your cat just wants to be fed. No higher power. Just a very persistent one with fur.


Or the contrast of chaos versus complete indifference. People arguing, pointing, completely wrapped up in something—and then there’s the cat. Sitting there, unbothered. That alone says more than anything else.


And this one made me laugh more than it probably should have.

My son texted me asking me to judge a wiener decoration contest. I wish I was kidding. And honestly, they didn’t disappoint.

There was one that clearly understood the assignment—full football theme, details, commitment. That one took first place without question. Another kept it simple but had just enough personality to grab second.


The rest? Pure chaos. And that’s what made it great.



And finally, while visiting my son a couple weeks ago, he asked if I'd seen this viral video and since I hadn't, he shared it with me. It's completely innocent. Completely unplanned. And somehow way funnier because of it.


None of this is groundbreaking. None of it is meant to be.

It’s just a reminder.

You’re allowed to step out of the noise. You’re allowed to laugh at something dumb, pause on something weird, or just enjoy a moment that doesn’t demand anything from you.

The chaos will still be there when you go back.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

When These Feelings Hit… Are They Even Mine?

 


by Julie Telgenhoff

There’s a moment you recognize it—the feeling isn’t yours.

Elke Neher released Stop Absorbing Other People’s Energies – Stop Taking On The Energy of Other People back in November 2017, and it became something I leaned on more than I expected. Not just a song, but a reset button. A way to come back to myself.

There were times I’d feel heavy for no clear reason. Anxiety, sadness, that low hum in the background would come upon me and instead of reacting, I started questioning it. Is this mine? Or am I picking up on something else… something circulating out there? In a world saturated with noise, fear cycles, and emotional overload, it’s easy to absorb what doesn’t belong to you and carry it like it does.

This track gave me space to separate. To sit with the feeling without claiming it. To let it pass instead of letting it root.

During the chaos of the COVID period, when fear seemed to move faster than truth, this became part of how I stayed grounded. Not by avoiding emotion—but by recognizing it, feeling it briefly, and then returning to center.

That’s where the real power is.

In Hermeticism, the principle of polarity teaches that everything exists on a spectrum. Not meant to trap us at extremes, but to remind us we can move. Balance isn’t passive, it’s a choice. A constant return to the middle ground which is key to living a successful life. 

That’s the practice. Not denying what you feel. Not clinging to it either.

Just coming back to your center. 

In Elke Neher’s introduction to the video, she describes it simply that this isn’t just music, it’s a clearing.

The music is designed to help you stop taking on what isn’t yours, it works on both the mind and body to release what’s been unconsciously carried. There’s an embedded energy transmission layered into the sound, along with subtle affirmations meant to gently reprogram and support whatever shifts need to happen.

All you really have to do is sit with it, let it move through you, and allow your system to reset—while staying hydrated so your body can process the release.

A quiet note. When this song first came out, I’d catch myself humming along without even thinking. There’s something about the simplicity of the sound that invites it. I didn’t understand why at the time, only that it felt grounding… like my body was finding its own way back to center. Later, I learned there’s a real reason for that. I’ll get into the deeper benefits of humming in the next article.


Monday, April 20, 2026

The Fourth Turning Is Here: Why the World Suddenly Feels Orchestrated

 

Most people have never heard of The Fourth Turning, but once you understand its core idea, it’s hard to unsee it.

Published in 1997 by William Strauss and Neil Howe, the book lays out a simple but unsettling theory: history moves in cycles, not straight lines. Roughly every 80–100 years—about the length of a long human life—society passes through four distinct phases, or “turnings.”

  • A High, where institutions are strong and society feels unified.
  • An Awakening, where people push back against that structure in search of meaning.
  • An Unraveling, where institutions weaken and individualism peaks.
And finally, a Fourth Turning—a crisis era where everything unstable breaks, forcing a reset.

The authors pointed to the American Revolution, the Civil War, and the Great Depression/World War II as prior Fourth Turnings. Each one tore the system down to its foundation—and rebuilt it.

When the book came out in the late 90s, the idea felt theoretical. The economy was booming. The future looked open-ended. The “crisis phase” was framed as something coming, not something present.

Fast forward to 2023, and Neil Howe returns with The Fourth Turning Is Here, making a blunt claim: the crisis isn’t coming anymore. We’re in it.

He traces the start back to the 2008 financial crash—not as a one-off event, but as the fracture point where the system began losing stability. From there, the pattern accelerates: political division, institutional distrust, economic strain, global tension. Not random chaos, but the build-up phase every Fourth Turning has historically gone through.

Where the sequel goes further—and where it starts to hit harder—is in describing what happens next.

According to Howe, crisis eras force a shift in priorities. The extreme individualism of the previous decades begins to collapse under its own weight. In its place comes coordination. Structure. A public willingness to accept tighter systems in exchange for stability.

That doesn’t happen because people are forced into it. It happens because, during prolonged instability, people start asking for it.

This is where the theory starts to overlap with the real-world direction being discussed by groups like the World Economic Forum and frameworks such as Agenda 2030.

Different language. Same direction.

  • Centralized coordination of economies.
  • Greater eliance on digital infrastructure.
  • Standardized systems that manage everything from finance to identity to movement.

Howe calls it “national mobilization.” The WEF calls it “building back better.” Strip the branding away, and both describe a world that becomes more managed, more structured, and less open-ended than the one people grew up in.

The timeline matters too. Howe places the peak of this crisis period somewhere between now and the early 2030s—roughly the same window where global policy frameworks keep pointing. That overlap is part of what’s making the theory feel less academic and more immediate.

But the part that gives the book its weight is how it ends.

Howe doesn’t describe permanent collapse. He describes resolution.

Every Fourth Turning in history, according to the model, ends the same way: the old system breaks, something new replaces it, and a new “High” begins. Order returns. Stability returns. Society feels aligned again.

The tradeoff is what changes.

The post-crisis world is more unified—but also more regulated. More stable—but also more structured. The same systems that prevent chaos also limit deviation. In other words, the peace that follows a Fourth Turning isn’t free ...it’s built. Like the Agenda 2030 15 minute "smart" cities program. 

That’s the real takeaway from the sequel.

It’s not predicting whether change is coming. It’s describing what kind of change tends to emerge when systems are pushed to their breaking point—and what people are willing to accept on the other side of that pressure.

If the first book was a theory about cycles, the second reads like a timestamp.

Not a warning ....a blueprint of what's happening now.