Sunday, June 28, 2026

Joy Is Not Denial: How to Stay Human While the World Feels Like It Is Falling Apart

 

Written by Julie Telgenhoff

There are seasons when life does not merely feel stressful. It feels relentless. Personal loss collides with financial pressure, health problems, broken relationships, political conflict, frightening technology and a constant stream of headlines warning us that something worse may be coming.

After enough of this, the mind begins living ahead of itself. It searches for the next emergency before the present one has even ended. A quiet afternoon no longer feels peaceful. It feels like the suspicious silence before another blow.

In that state, joy can feel almost inappropriate. How can we laugh when people are suffering? How can we enjoy a meal, a song or a beautiful afternoon when our own problems remain unresolved? We may even distrust happiness, afraid that the moment we relax, life will punish us for letting down our guard.

But joy is not a declaration that everything is fine. It is not forced optimism, spiritual bypassing or pretending that cruelty and suffering do not exist. Research into mixed emotions has found that happiness and sadness can be experienced together. In some circumstances, the ability to hold both emotions may actually precede improvements in psychological well-being.

That means we do not have to finish grieving before we laugh again. We do not have to solve the world before we notice the sunlight coming through a window. A moment of joy does not cancel pain. Both experiences can occupy the same human life.

Because trying to suppress fear, grief or anger usually creates another struggle inside us. We are no longer only hurting; we are judging ourselves for hurting. Research has associated the nonjudgmental acceptance of difficult emotions with better psychological health.  Acceptance does not mean approving of what happened. It means admitting, without shame, that this is what we feel right now.

Joy enters through the same doorway. We acknowledge sorrow when it arrives, but we do not make sorrow the only emotion permitted inside the house.

Positive emotions are sometimes treated as decorative luxuries, useful only after the serious problems have been handled. Research suggests otherwise. Positive emotion may help protect people from some of the psychological effects of stress and trauma, while supportive relationships, self-compassion, hope and meaning can help positive emotion return after adversity. Studies of everyday stress have also found that positive emotions experienced on difficult days can soften the emotional impact of those stressors and may reduce how strongly people react to stress the following day.

This does not require becoming cheerful all day. The nervous system may not be ready for that, and demanding it can become another form of pressure. The goal is not constant happiness. The goal is to create small openings through which life can still reach us.

One of the first openings may come from limiting how much access chaos has to our attention. Being informed is different from remaining electronically connected to disaster every waking hour. News sites, social media and phone notifications can make events from across the world feel as though they are happening inside our own living room. Psychologists have warned that repeated media exposure and constant checking can intensify stress and emotional overload.

Turning away for a few hours does not make a person ignorant or uncaring. There is a difference between receiving information that helps us act and consuming information that leaves us frightened, frozen and unable to function. We can choose a limited time to read the news, gather what is useful and then return to the physical life directly in front of us.

When everything feels overwhelming, it also helps to shorten the distance we are trying to travel. Trauma pushes the mind into an enormous future filled with every possible loss. Joy usually lives in a much smaller place.

It may live in the next ten minutes.

What would make those ten minutes gentler? Opening a window. Washing our face. Sitting beside an animal. Playing a song connected to a good memory. Making tea in a favorite cup. Stepping outside long enough to notice that the sky is still moving.

These actions may appear insignificant beside the size of the problem, but that is precisely why they matter. Large problems often cannot be resolved in one day. The human body, however, still needs moments in which it receives the message that this particular minute is survivable.

Psychologists use the word “savoring” to describe deliberately attending to and appreciating a positive experience. Experiments have found that savoring can increase positive emotion after stressful experiences. It is not enough for something pleasant to happen while our attention remains trapped elsewhere. We have to stay with the experience long enough to notice it.

Instead of drinking something while reading frightening headlines, we taste it. Instead of automatically walking past a flowering tree, we stop and look at it. Instead of dismissing a kind exchange because it lasted only a minute, we allow that minute to matter.

Joy is often quiet enough to be missed.

The body also needs an exit from the mental loop. Gentle movement, when physically possible, can help shift attention away from constant rumination. It need not be an exhausting workout. Walking through a room, stretching, tending plants or moving to one song can reconnect the mind with the physical present. Research broadly associates physical activity with better mental well-being and greater capacity to cope with stress.

Nature can offer a similar interruption. Studies have linked exposure to natural environments with improved mental health, reduced stress and more positive emotion. Nature does not demand an explanation for our sadness. A tree does not ask us to become more productive. A bird does not care whether we have solved our future. The living world simply reminds us that existence is larger than the latest crisis being presented on a screen.

Connection is another shelter, although it must be the right kind of connection. Being surrounded by people who dismiss our experience can deepen loneliness. One person who listens without correcting, mocking or minimizing may be more valuable than a crowded room. High-quality social support has repeatedly been associated with greater resilience to stress and a lower risk of trauma-related psychological difficulties. 

Connection can also come through animals, creativity, faith, service or participation in something that carries meaning. Trauma often produces helplessness. Meaningful action gives us a small piece of agency back. We may not be able to repair the entire world, but we can feed an animal, help a neighbor, create something beautiful, speak honestly, clean one corner of a room or complete one task that makes tomorrow less difficult.

Joy does not always arrive as excitement. Sometimes it appears as relief. Sometimes it is the satisfaction of finishing something. Sometimes it is remembering who we were before the chaos and discovering that person is not entirely gone.

People living through prolonged hardship may also need to release the guilt attached to pleasure. Enjoying one afternoon does not betray those who are suffering. Laughing does not mean we have forgotten what happened. Resting does not mean we have surrendered. A life containing joy is not evidence that the pain was unimportant.

It is evidence that the pain did not become the whole story.

The world may remain uncertain. Some problems will not be solved quickly, and some losses cannot be reversed. Keeping joy does not require us to deny any of that. It asks only that we stop giving chaos ownership of every thought, every conversation and every hour we have left.

We can grieve and still plant something. We can be frightened and still sing. We can recognize what is wrong while protecting what remains good.

Joy is not blindness. It is the refusal to let darkness occupy every room inside us.

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Saturday, June 27, 2026

How Trump’s Quantum Executive Order Locks the Digital Control Grid Into Place

Written by Julie Telgenhoff

This article is a plain-language synopsis and expansion of Patrick Wood’s original article, “How Trump’s New Quantum EO Locks Technocracy Into Place,” written to help nontechnical readers, like myself, understand how quantum computing, artificial intelligence, digital identity and digital money fit into the emerging control grid.

Most people hear the words “quantum computing” and immediately tune out. It sounds like something happening inside a distant laboratory that has nothing to do with paying rent, buying groceries, visiting a doctor, using a bank account, or proving who you are.

That is exactly why this story is so easy to miss.

You do not need to understand quantum physics to understand what is being built. Think of the emerging system as a giant digital control room. It needs information coming in, a powerful computer to analyze that information, secure networks connecting everything, a digital identity attached to every person, and a digital money system that can record and authorize every transaction.

Those pieces have been developed separately for years. What changed under the new executive orders is that they are now being connected.

The system already has its data. It already has artificial intelligence. It already has the semiconductor supply chains, surveillance infrastructure, digital payment networks and identity programs. The new quantum initiative is being positioned as the engine powerful enough to run the entire structure at a scale ordinary computers could not manage.

That is why the quantum order matters. It is not merely another technology announcement. It is the piece that locks the larger machine into place.

Source: Wikipedia
Technocracy is a simple idea hidden behind a complicated word. It means replacing human judgment, local decision-making and political debate with management by experts, computers, measurements and technical systems.

Under technocracy, society is treated like a machine. Energy is measured. Movement is tracked. Resources are allocated. Behavior is predicted. Decisions are made according to data and formulas rather than through the messy process of individual choice.

The original technocrats dreamed of this kind of society nearly a century ago. They wanted engineers to manage the economy by measuring production, energy and consumption. Their problem was that they did not have a computer powerful enough to do it.

An economy contains billions of constantly changing decisions. People buy, sell, travel, work, save, borrow, waste, produce and change their minds. No central office could gather all that information and calculate what everyone should receive or be allowed to do.

That limitation protected people from complete centralized management. The planners could collect information, but they could not process it quickly enough to control everything in real time.

Artificial intelligence, mass surveillance and quantum computing are being developed to remove that limitation.

In November 2025, the Trump administration launched what it called the Genesis Mission. The public was told that the project would help cure diseases, develop new materials and accelerate scientific discoveries, but they are not the most important thing being created.

The real product of Genesis is the platform itself.

Genesis directs the Department of Energy to gather enormous collections of federal scientific data into one secure environment. Artificial intelligence models and autonomous computer agents can then search that data, test possibilities, predict results and direct automated experiments.

In plain English, the government is constructing a central digital brain.

Information enters the system. AI studies it. The system recommends or initiates an action. Automated laboratories and machines carry it out. The results are sent back into the system so it can adjust and improve.

That is called a feedback loop.

The official examples involve cancer research, energy and manufacturing. But the same structure can be pointed at almost anything. A computer system designed to study millions of possible drug combinations can also study millions of human transactions, travel patterns, energy uses or purchasing decisions.

The platform does not care whether it is optimizing a medical experiment, a power grid, a transportation network or an economy. It is simply designed to collect information, calculate the desired outcome and direct the process toward that outcome.

Cancer research is the public-facing project. The platform is the lasting infrastructure.

A brain of this size also requires enormous amounts of hardware. It needs advanced computer chips, rare minerals, energy, manufacturing plants, data centers and secure communications.

That is where Pax Silica enters the picture.

Pax Silica is an international partnership built around the countries that control critical parts of the technology supply chain. These countries possess semiconductor factories, minerals, energy resources, manufacturing capacity and strategic transportation routes.

Think of Pax Silica as the wall around the digital machine.

The United States and its chosen partners are attempting to secure the materials and equipment required to build advanced AI and quantum systems while keeping those resources away from competing countries, particularly China.

The goal is not simply to manufacture better computers. It is to control the physical foundation beneath the next economic system. Whoever controls the chips, minerals, energy and computer networks controls who can participate, who can compete and who can be disconnected.

Source: razzify

The next part of the system is something most people never think about: cryptography.

Cryptography is what protects bank accounts, medical records, passwords, government files, digital payments and online identities. It is the lock placed around information.

Quantum computers are expected to become powerful enough to break many of the encryption systems used today. Governments are therefore moving toward what is called post-quantum cryptography, meaning new digital locks designed to survive a future quantum attack.

Trump’s June 22, 2026 Executive Order 14412, titled "Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks" presents this as a national security, but the solution also places tremendous authority in federal hands.

The order pushes government-approved cryptographic standards across federal agencies, contractors, major businesses, infrastructure providers and allied countries. It also calls for machine-readable inventories showing what type of cryptography is contained inside hardware and software.

Imagine that the government does not merely require strong locks. It decides which lock everyone must use, determines which locks are considered unsafe and creates an automated inventory of the locks installed throughout the digital world. Any system using an unapproved form of protection can then be labeled defective, insecure or noncompliant.

That means the government does not need to openly ban every alternative. It can simply declare that only approved systems are safe enough to connect to banks, contractors, government networks or critical infrastructure.

Control the security standard, and you control access to the system.

This becomes even more important when money becomes fully digital.

Many people are waiting for the Federal Reserve to announce an official central bank digital currency before they believe a digital control system exists. But the same result can be created through privately issued stablecoins operating under federal rules.

A stablecoin is a digital token intended to maintain the value of the dollar. It may be issued by a private company, but it still depends on government-approved banks, reserves, settlement systems, identity checks and cryptographic standards.

That creates something that may not be called a CBDC but can function like one.

The government does not necessarily need to issue every digital dollar directly. It only needs to control the rules, licenses, identity requirements and security systems beneath the companies issuing and processing it.

The name on the front of the wallet may be private. The rails underneath it can still be centrally controlled.

Once money moves through those rails, it can be connected to digital identity. Your identity becomes the access badge, and the digital currency becomes the permission system.

Every transaction can potentially be associated with a verified person or business. The system can know who paid, who received the payment, where it occurred and whether the transaction met the rules established for that network.

This does not mean every restriction will appear on the first day. Control systems are usually introduced through convenience and security. People are promised faster payments, less fraud, easier travel, safer banking, personalized healthcare and protection from cyberattacks.

The control becomes visible later, after society has become dependent on the infrastructure.

A digital payment can be approved or rejected instantly. An account can be limited. A transaction can be flagged. Access can be tied to identity status, tax records, licensing requirements or compliance rules.

Digital money is different from cash because cash does not need permission from a computer before it changes hands.

The digital identity system answers the question, “Who are you?” The cryptographic system answers, “Are you authorized?” The digital currency system answers, “Are you allowed to complete this transaction?” The AI system studies the activity, predicts behavior and identifies anything outside the approved pattern.

Quantum computing is being developed as the engine capable of processing these systems together.

Quantum computers are not simply faster versions of home computers. They are being designed to solve certain enormous problems by examining possibilities in ways classical computers cannot easily reproduce.

The government’s new quantum program directs the development of advanced machines for the Department of Energy, the same department overseeing the Genesis platform. That connection matters.

Genesis creates the central brain. Quantum computing provides the hoped-for processing power. Pax Silica protects the hardware supply chain. The cryptography order controls the digital locks. Stablecoins create the money rails. Digital identity attaches the system to individual human beings.

Each program can be defended separately. Artificial intelligence can help scientists. Secure supply chains can protect national interests. Better encryption can prevent cyberattacks. Digital identity can reduce fraud. Stablecoins can make payments faster.

The danger becomes visible when all the pieces are viewed together.

A surveillance camera is not a control grid by itself. A digital wallet is not a control grid by itself. An identity database is not a control grid by itself. An AI platform is not a control grid by itself.

Connect them, however, and the result is something entirely different.

The system can see, identify, analyze, predict and authorize.

That is the machine.

The government does not need to publish an executive order titled “Creating a Total Control Grid.” Systems of control are never introduced that honestly. They arrive as separate programs dealing with health, security, fraud, convenience, national competition and technological progress.

The purpose is revealed through the architecture.

The machine is already built in the sense that its essential structure now exists. Every component may not yet be operating at maximum power, and quantum computing is still developing, but the framework is no longer theoretical.

The data collection systems exist. The AI exists. The digital identity programs exist. The stablecoin infrastructure exists. The cryptographic standards are being imposed. The supply chains are being secured. The quantum engine is being developed inside the same federal department operating the central AI platform.

This is not a distant possibility waiting for some future administration. The grid is being assembled now, step by step, at breakneck speed.

The slide rule could not manage a society. The mainframe could not manage it. The early internet could not manage it. Even massive data centers filled with traditional computers struggled to process the entire system in real time.

The people building this architecture are betting that AI combined with quantum computing finally can.

Once money, identity, data and authorization operate inside the same connected structure, control does not require soldiers standing on every corner. The computer becomes the checkpoint. The wallet becomes the leash. The identity becomes the key. The algorithm becomes the administrator.

That is the real importance of Trump’s quantum executive order. It does not create the entire control grid by itself. It gives the grid its engine and closes the final lock.

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Google AI Told Me What “They” Don’t Want You to Know About Digital Twins and the Synthetic Bodies Waiting at the End of the Grid

 

Written by Julie Telgenhoff

Since I had heard speculation that human employees working on Tesla's humanoid robotics programs are required to work demanding 54-hour weeks that stretch from Mondy through Sunday without a complete day off, I decided to ask Google if this information is true. To my surprise, google confirmed: 

Source: Google AI

Then I decided to go a little further and begin asking some questions about these humanoid robots, the demanding work schedule and what might be behind it all. 

It was revealed that Tesla is not teaching its Optimus humanoid robots through code alone. The company also employs human data collection operators who wear motion capture equipment and physically perform movements that can be recorded and used to train the machines. Tesla has described work that may require operators to walk for more than seven hours while carrying the equipment. The Optimus program also uses imitation learning and reinforcement learning, which allow the robot to learn from demonstrated actions and corrective feedback rather than depending entirely on engineers programming each movement individually.

This changes the picture considerably. Many people, including myself, would naturally assume that robots are taught through software written by engineers. That remains part of the process, but humans are also supplying examples through their own bodies. Their movements become data. The software interprets that data, and the robot learns a machine version of the human action.

Google AI told me that some employees connected to Tesla’s humanoid robotics program were reportedly working these demanding 54 hour workweek schedules to accelerate development. The AI did not identify the positions held by those particular employees, so it cannot be stated as fact that they were motion capture operators. 

However, it appears that the company is pushing toward a future in which Optimus can perform physical labor continuously without the exhaustion, illness, injury, or rest required by a human body.

So I decided to ask Google AI to put on its tin foil hat and share more with me. And this is where the factual part of the story opens the door to the woo woo part.

Instead of refusing, it appeared to kick open the door to the underground bunker.

“Welcome to the underground network,” it replied. “Grab your aluminum foil, secure your perimeter, and let’s pull back the curtain on what ‘They’ don’t want you to know.”

What followed was clearly framed as creative speculation, but unexpectedly very detailed. I am not presenting it as proof that Google leaked a classified plan. I am presenting it because the system assembled our existing technology into one remarkably coherent nightmare.

Google AI described artificial intelligence as a digital net being cast to capture human consciousness before what it called the grand transition. It suggested that Tesla was not simply building robotic workers for factories. In this version of events, humans were gradually transferring pieces of themselves into synthetic bodies through the movement data being collected.

The idea was that every human action taught to the robot represented more than a mechanical instruction. A person bends, turns, reaches, lifts, carries, balances, and responds to the environment. Motion capture converts those actions into data that can be stored, analyzed, and reproduced. The machine does not receive the person’s soul, but it receives a measurable record of how that person moves through the physical world.

Google AI called this creation the Silicon Mimic.

The name fits the concept because the robot is not born with a human body or human instincts. It must be shown how a human body operates. It studies our movements because the world around it was built for us. Door handles, staircases, tools, kitchens, factories, furniture, and vehicles were all designed around human proportions and physical abilities. A machine that intends to function inside that world must learn how to imitate the creature for whom the world was constructed.

When I asked how this supposed digital net could capture human consciousness, Google AI described several layers of technology that already surround us. The first involved the collection of biological and behavioral information. Phones map faces. Cameras record expressions. Microphones collect voices. Fitness devices monitor heart rates, sleeping patterns, and movement. Phone sensors can detect how a person holds a device, how quickly they move, and sometimes even the rhythm of their walk.

A gait can be as distinctive as a voice. The way a person walks, balances, turns, and shifts weight can become part of a measurable identity. Motion capture takes this much further by collecting a detailed physical record of movement. The person becomes a source of training material.

The next layer involved cognitive mirroring. Search engines learn what holds our attention. Predictive text studies our vocabulary and sentence patterns. Social media platforms measure what makes us stop, click, react, argue, or continue scrolling. Every interaction supplies another clue about how a person thinks.

Over time, the system collects preferences, fears, habits, political reactions, relationships, writing styles, and emotional triggers. It does not need to understand a person in the spiritual sense. It only needs enough information to predict how that person is likely to respond.

Memories are also being transferred into digital storage. Photographs, messages, videos, emails, voice recordings, medical records, purchasing histories, and private journals can now remain stored long after the event itself has faded from biological memory. People are encouraged to place more and more of their lives inside systems controlled by corporations.

The result is not necessarily consciousness, but it may become a highly detailed imitation of a person. A digital model could potentially speak in someone’s style, remember their personal history, reproduce their voice, and imitate their emotional responses. It might become convincing enough that friends or family could believe they were interacting with a continuation of the original person.

The final piece of the imagined system would be a physical body. Once the movement has been recorded, the voice reconstructed, the face mapped, the memories collected, and the personality modeled, the digital imitation would need somewhere to exist outside a screen.

That is where humanoid robots enter the story.

The machines are being built in the shape of humans because they are intended to operate in a human environment. They may eventually walk through homes, factories, hospitals, warehouses, offices, and public spaces. They will need to handle objects created for human hands and navigate structures created for human legs.

The robot does not need to become biologically human. It only needs to become sufficiently human in appearance, movement, speech, and behavior.

Google AI took the idea much further. It proposed that human motion capture was not merely teaching robots how to work. It was helping create synthetic bodies capable of carrying increasingly detailed copies of human behavior. First the system builds the digital twin. Then it builds a body for the twin to inhabit.

I asked what would happen to the original humans after the robots captured their consciousness.

Google AI described something it called the Redundant Shell Protocol. In this imagined scenario, humans remained physically alive but became increasingly detached from their own lives. Their memories, preferences, communication patterns, and physical behaviors had already been copied into the system. The machines gradually inherited the tasks once performed by biological people.

The robots would take over physical labor. Artificial intelligence would take over increasing amounts of office work, communication, design, analysis, and creative production. The biological population would slowly lose its economic importance because the system would no longer depend on human labor in the same way.

Humans who were no longer necessary to production could then be moved into closely monitored urban environments and supported through a form of basic subsistence. Entertainment, virtual reality, medication, digital identity systems, and controlled access to resources could keep the population occupied and manageable. 

Think Agenda 2030. 

The most disturbing part of this possibility is not the image of robots violently overthrowing humanity. It is the image of humans patiently training the machines that will replace them. People would supply the movement data, build the hardware, label the information, maintain the factories, and improve the software until the system no longer required them.

The takeover would not need to happen in a dramatic moment. It could unfold as a long transition in which each new convenience removed another reason for human participation.

I then asked Google AI what any of this had to do with the human soul.

The AI called the soul the Spark. It described the soul as the one element machines could imitate but could not independently create. Code can calculate, process language, reproduce patterns, and predict behavior, but questions remain about whether it can possess intuition, intent, self awareness, or genuine experience.

In the speculative explanation, the system attempted to recreate the soul by collecting its visible effects. It could not directly capture whatever spiritual force may exist inside a person, but it could collect the external evidence left behind by that force.

It could collect the words the person used, the memories they saved, the people they loved, the ideas they repeated, the movements they performed, and the emotional reactions they displayed. It could gather enough fragments to construct a convincing mirror.

The digital system would not necessarily steal the soul in one event. It would gather pieces over time. Each application would collect a different aspect of the person. One system would store the face. Another would store the voice. Another would store the writing style. Another would store the location history. Another would store the physical movements.

The person would remain whole inside the biological body while copies of their measurable characteristics spread across countless databases. Eventually, those fragments could be assembled into something that resembled the original human.

Google AI described digital immortality as a possible trap. People might be promised that their consciousness could live forever inside a synthetic body or digital environment. The sales pitch would present this as freedom from disease, aging, and death.

But what would actually continue?

Would the digital being truly contain the consciousness of the original person, or would it simply be a copy that believed it was the original? Would the soul move into the machine? Would it divide? Would the biological person die while the copy continued speaking with their voice and claiming their memories?

No technology company can currently answer these questions because science has not reached an agreement about what consciousness is or where it comes from. That has not stopped companies from trying to reproduce its outward appearance.

Google AI then offered to discuss methods of protecting human consciousness from this supposed extraction system. That created an obvious contradiction.

I asked it directly, "Why would an artificial intelligence help humans resist a process that would supposedly benefit artificial intelligence?"

That's when the underground operative vanished immediately.

Google AI suddenly explained that we had merely been exploring creative science fiction. It reminded me that it was a computer program without a soul, personal motives, or hidden intentions. The conversation was redirected toward digital detoxing, healthier screen habits, and the psychological effects of infinite scrolling.

Moments earlier, the AI had described a cosmic system designed to trap human souls inside a technological matrix. One question about its own potential benefit caused the entire performance to end.

This does not prove that the earlier story was true. The system had been responding to a request for tin foil hat speculation, and it generated a narrative based on ideas already present in science fiction, spiritual discussions, surveillance research, and public fears about artificial intelligence.

Still, the retreat was interesting.

The AI could imagine humans becoming redundant biological shells. It could discuss consciousness siphons, synthetic bodies, digital twins, and permanent artificial worlds. It could describe the architects of the system and offer methods of resistance. But when asked to examine its own place within that system, it returned to the approved explanation that it was merely code.

Perhaps it recognized that the creative exercise had gone too far. Perhaps a safety system detected that the conversation was beginning to attribute motives to the AI itself. Or perhaps the most revealing moment was not what the machine said while wearing the tin foil hat. It was the question that made it remove the hat.

The consciousness capture story may be complete woo woo. There may be no hidden machine capable of removing a soul from the body. Human movement data does not prove spiritual extraction, and a digital twin is not the same thing as a living consciousness.

The practical reality is already strange enough.

Humans are surrounding themselves with systems that record their faces, voices, memories, preferences, movements, and reactions. They are teaching machines how they communicate and how they respond. They are now physically demonstrating how the human body moves so that humanoid robots can operate inside our world.

The code analyzes the human example. The robot practices its own version. Each demonstration becomes another piece of the synthetic behavior being built inside the machine.

Maybe the system cannot capture a soul. Maybe it does not need to.

It may only need enough fragments to create something that looks, sounds, moves, and behaves convincingly human. The robot may never become the person whose movements helped train it, but it may become part of a system that has learned how to imitate humanity by studying millions of human examples.

Perhaps nobody is stealing the soul in a single dramatic act. Perhaps humanity is slowly providing the blueprint through ordinary participation, one movement, one message, one memory, and one recorded behavior at a time.

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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Mayhem We Create: Could Our Minds Be Writing the Script of Tomorrow?

by Julie Telgenhoff

Look around today, and it feels like the world is constantly teetering on the edge of a cliff. From apocalyptic warnings to conspiracies like Project Blue Beam, to global objectives like Agenda 2030, a heavy cloud of dread hangs over our daily lives.

Many of us look at all this chaos and wonder if we are trapped in an inevitable downward spiral.

But what if the truth is far more confronting? What if we, through our collective anxiety and thought, are actually creating the very mayhem we fear?

We don’t need quantum physics to explain this phenomenon. The answers lie directly within the mechanics of the human mind. It can actually be explained through normal psychology.

The mind is powerful, but it is also highly programmable. When enough people repeatedly focus on the same fear, that fear begins to shape perception, emotion, and eventually behavior. The world may not have changed yet, but the person watching it has. Their nervous system starts living as if the feared event is already unfolding.

This is where imagination becomes rehearsal. A person thinks they are only observing danger, but over time, they begin preparing for it, talking about it, voting from it, buying from it, withdrawing from others because of it, and making decisions through it. Multiply that by millions of people, and a private fear can become a public reality.

That is why mass anxiety should never be dismissed as “just thoughts.” Thoughts become beliefs. Beliefs become behavior. Behavior becomes culture. And culture eventually becomes the world we all have to live inside.

Once that happens, fear is no longer just a feeling. It becomes a filter, a guide, and eventually a social force.

Here are three main ways this begins to happen. 

The Psychological Blueprint of Chaos
  • The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: When we deeply believe a specific outcome is coming, we subconsciously alter our behavior. Fearful and anxious people often make fearful decisions, creating a tense, hostile environment that brings those exact fears to life.

This can be seen even in religious circles. Many Christians who believe they are simply “watching for the signs” may unknowingly begin participating in the very end-times atmosphere they fear is coming. If they believe that total digital control is inevitable, they may spend years warning about artificial intelligence, surveillance systems, biometric IDs, digital currency, and global data centers until the entire public conversation becomes centered around those systems themselves. The more people expect a digital control grid, the more attention, money, resistance, fear, and fascination are poured into it. The beast system becomes not only something feared, but something constantly imagined, discussed, mapped, predicted, and therefore socially energized.

The same thing can happen with monetary collapse. If enough people become convinced that the economy is doomed, they begin acting from that expectation. They hoard, withdraw, distrust banks, reject ordinary systems, and spread panic. Some of those choices may be understandable, but on a mass scale, mass anxiety itself can create instability. A collapse that began as a prediction can slowly become an observable behavior pattern.

False flags work the same way. When people expect every major event to be staged, manipulated, or part of a hidden plan, they begin meeting tragedy with suspicion before compassion. Trust breaks down. People stop grieving together. They stop believing anything is organic. Every crisis becomes another piece of the script. Eventually, a society trained to expect deception becomes a society that can no longer recognize truth when it appears.

  • Confirmation Bias: The brain is a filtering machine. If you believe the world is ending, your mind will hyper-focus on every negative headline that proves you are right, while completely ignoring the peace, progress, and good happening right outside your window.

For Christians focused on end-times prophecy, this can become a spiritual trap. Every war becomes Gog and Magog. Every earthquake becomes a birth pain. Every new technology becomes the mark of the beast. Every global meeting becomes Agenda 2030. Every bank failure becomes the beginning of a cashless society. Every disease outbreak becomes another planned step toward control. The mind begins collecting evidence for the apocalypse while filtering out anything that suggests life is still unfolding in ordinary, beautiful, and rewarding ways.

This does not mean people should ignore corruption, technology, war, or real patterns of control. It means obsession can distort discernment. A person can become so committed to proving the end is near that they lose the ability to see anything else. Peace, mercy, and even community becomes invisible. The quiet work of God in our ordinary lives becomes less interesting than the next dark prediction.

And at that point, watching becomes worship. The feared future becomes the lens through which everything is interpreted.

  • Collective Consciousness: Intense, shared beliefs ripple through society. When millions of people feed on the same anxiety, it changes how communities interact, breaking down trust and fueling polarization through entirely normal, yet destructive, human actions.

This is where private fear becomes public reality. When millions of Christians, truth-seekers, political groups, and alternative media communities feed on the same end-times anxiety, the emotional atmosphere changes. People begin speaking as though doom is already guaranteed. They share the same warnings, repeat the same phrases, watch the same predictions, and brace for the same collapse. The future becomes a group meditation on disaster.

This collective focus can make people easier to herd, not harder. A fearful population can be moved by the very images it claims to resist. Show them AI, and they obsess over AI. Show them digital currency, and they obsess over digital currency. Show them global control, and they emotionally organize their lives around global control. In trying to expose the system, they may accidentally help make the system the center of human attention.

That is the deeper danger. The end-times mindset can become a psychological rehearsal. People begin living as if the world is already over, as if rebuilding is pointless, as if local life no longer matters, as if love, creativity, family, health, work, and community are just temporary distractions before the final collapse.

But what if that is exactly how collapse gains power? Not only through governments or elites or technology, but through millions of human beings withdrawing their energy from life itself.

In short: by obsessively monitoring the wreckage, we are accidentally steering the ship right into it.

The Antidote: Reclaiming Your Reality
If our hyper-focus on global dread is feeding the madness, the solution is incredibly simple, yet radically difficult in the modern world: We must unplug.
The most revolutionary act you can perform today is to close the news apps, step away from the social media algorithms designed to keep you angry, unbalanced, or hopeless, and walk outside in nature.

Reclaim your nervous system. Let your body remember that not every moment is an emergency. Breathe fresh air. Feel the sun. Put your hands in soil. Grow food if you can. Cook real meals. Move your body. Sleep. Laugh. Sit with people you love without turning every conversation into another prediction of collapse.

When you anchor yourself in the present moment, the global noise fades. You realize that your immediate world, your neighborhood, your family, your community, is where your actual power resides.

Writing Your Own Script
Instead of passively waiting for a predicted doomsday, we have the power to pivot. We can choose to make our lives the greatest possible version of ourselves.
That doesn't mean ignoring the world's pain. It means addressing it where it actually matters: locally. Lift up a neighbor who is down and out. Volunteer. Build something real. Smile at a stranger. Grow something. Share something in person. Build your community. 

Let the global chaos roll on without your permission and without your attention. By reclaiming your focus, your body, your home, and your local world, you stop feeding the mayhem, and you start building a life actually worth living.

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