Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Healthy Depression

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

There is a certain kind of depression no pill can touch because it is not coming from a chemical imbalance, failed relationship, or temporary hardship. It comes from awareness. From seeing too much while living inside a society that has become deeply disconnected from authenticity, morality, reflection, and truth.

I call it “The Healthy Depression.”

Not the kind that makes someone unable to function, but the kind that quietly settles into those who can still feel what modern life has become. A low-level grief that comes from recognizing how artificial, performative, distracted, manipulated, and spiritually empty much of society now feels, especially here in the United States.

Once you begin seeing it, it becomes impossible to unsee.

You notice how people stay endlessly busy so they never have to sit alone with themselves. You notice how addiction has become normalized in nearly every form imaginable — not only drugs and alcohol, but scrolling, shopping, food, validation, pornography, outrage, attention, and social media dopamine loops. Entire lives are built around avoiding stillness because stillness would force reflection, and reflection might force someone to confront unresolved pain.

Modern society no longer teaches people how to heal trauma. It teaches them how to distract themselves from it.

Instead of learning how to transform suffering into wisdom, people become trapped inside their triggers. Their reactions are then easily manipulated by politics, media, algorithms, fear campaigns, division tactics, and endless manufactured outrage. The manipulation works because most people never did the difficult inner work required to truly know themselves beyond their programming.

Former Soviet defector Yuri Bezmenov warned decades ago that nations could be destroyed without bombs through ideological subversion. He described stages that included demoralization, destabilization, crisis, and finally normalization — a stage where dysfunction becomes so constant that people emotionally adapt to it and begin accepting it as ordinary life.

That final stage feels painfully familiar now.

People sense that something is off, but many do not want to do the hard work required to change themselves, reclaim discernment, or confront the ways they themselves contribute to the sickness around them. It is easier to remain distracted, emotionally reactive, and externally focused than to look inward honestly.

What we are witnessing is called inversion which shows up as: 

  • Image over integrity
  • Performance over authenticity
  • Stimulation over wisdom
  • Attention over meaning
  • Identity over character

Today, people photograph experiences instead of truly living them. They curate personalities instead of developing depth. Public and private selves split further apart until many no longer even know who they really are underneath the masks they wear for survival, status, or approval. 

I once worked around someone who embodied this perfectly. To the outside world he appeared humble, supportive, successful, generous, and family-oriented. He owned a multi-million dollar company and projected the image of a man who cared deeply about the people working for him. But behind the scenes the environment was built on fear, manipulation, favoritism, sabotage, and emotional abuse.

Employees learned quickly that professional authenticity was dangerous while being the "yes sir" person was rewarded. People adapted themselves using manipulation to survive the culture at the top. Those that refused to be a part of this dyfunctional system, silently adapted, left for their own sanity or were fired. The owner carefully maintained the appearance of integrity while privately living in complete contradiction to it, even reducing relationships and marriage into status symbols that that would get him attention and reinforced his image of being successful.

That experience taught me something important: what society calls “success” is often spiritual emptiness hidden behind presentation.

And that emptiness spreads.

There was once a time when elders were deeply respected because wisdom had to be earned through hardship, reflection, restraint, humility, and conscious living. Many Indigenous cultures understood that suffering could either harden a person into bitterness or refine them into wisdom. Elders were valued not because of wealth or image, but because they had confronted themselves deeply enough to become trustworthy guides for others.

Today, many older people are still operating from the same unconscious programming they carried decades earlier, while younger generations have been conditioned to view aging itself as weakness or irrelevance. We now live in a culture overflowing with information but starving for wisdom.

People no longer remember what moral authenticity feels like because it is a feeling.

It is something felt deeply within the body when actions, values, and inner truth are aligned. There is a groundedness that comes from living in integrity, even when doing so costs you approval, comfort, relationships, status, or belonging. You know when you are betraying yourself, and you also know when you are walking honestly through life without selling your soul to fit into a corrupted system.

For me, seeking truth became more important than comfort a long time ago.

Not the performative truth for social media points or intellectual superiority, but the painful kind that requires continuous self-reflection. The kind that forces someone to examine their own ego, wounds, blind spots, reactions, and conditioning. I have endured years of loneliness, misunderstanding, struggle, and pain without the comfort of strong family support or a sacred partnership beside me. But instead of allowing pain to turn me bitter or numb, I made inner work my daily responsibility.

I reflect constantly on how to overcome my own programming so I am not contributing to the insanity around me. I want my actions to reflect who I truly am inwardly. I want to move through life grounded, balanced, discerning, and morally aligned. And maybe that is what true elderhood once meant. It wasn't perfection, but someone who had suffered consciously enough to become wise.

That is the real work we all need to be focusing on now. Because nothing else has worked, not trying to wake more people up, more online posting, not waiting for politicians, influencers, or systems to save humanity from itself and definitely not more destraction and scrolling. 

The answer to this “healthy depression” is deeper reflection.

Perhaps this unsettling feeling people carry is actually the soul rejecting artificiality, manipulation, and the emptiness of a culture that rewards appearance while starving authenticity.

Inner work is difficult because it requires the death of illusion. It requires accountability. It requires honesty. It requires sitting quietly with yourself long enough to recognize where you are still fragmented, reactive, ego-driven, fearful, dishonest, addicted, performative, or asleep.

And that is why most people avoid it.

But nothing is going to change externally until human beings begin honestly examining themselves internally. We cannot heal society while refusing to heal ourselves. We cannot continue blaming governments, corporations, media systems, or culture while refusing to acknowledge how often we willingly participate in the very things destroying us.

So maybe it is time for more people to talk openly about this “healthy depression” instead of medicating it away or numbing themselves further. Maybe it is time to sit with the discomfort instead of running from it. Maybe it is time to stop performing consciousness and actually practice it.

Talk about this article with others. Reflect honestly on your own life. Ask yourself difficult questions. Pay attention to the ways your attention, emotions, fears, addictions, and identity are being manipulated. Work on becoming someone whose inner world matches their outward actions.

Because in the end, the only thing any of us truly have the power to change is self, and maybe enough people doing that sincerely is how a broken society begins finding its soul again.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

The World Speaks in Symbols



Most people move through life believing they are making decisions rationally and independently, yet psychology, advertising, politics, religion, and modern media all point to something much deeper beneath the surface. Human beings are highly symbolic creatures. We respond emotionally to imagery, color, sound, ritual, geometry, and repetition long before conscious analysis fully kicks in.

Ancient civilizations understood this intuitively. Long before modern neuroscience or behavioral psychology existed, societies communicated power, divinity, hierarchy, morality, fear, and identity through symbols. Temples were covered in sacred geometry. Kings ruled beneath sigils and banners. Religions encoded entire philosophies into symbolic imagery. Warriors marched beneath flags because symbols unified emotion and identity far more effectively than words ever could.

Modern society likes to imagine it has evolved beyond this ancient understanding, but in many ways it has simply commercialized and digitized it.

Today, corporations spend billions of dollars studying branding psychology, color theory, emotional association, and visual design because symbols influence human behavior. A logo is never “just a logo.” Companies carefully engineer shapes, colors, and imagery to create subconscious emotional reactions tied to trust, prestige, authority, safety, rebellion, luxury, intelligence, or power.

Even color alone carries psychological influence. Red stimulates urgency, appetite, intensity, and action. Blue creates feelings of trust, calmness, stability, and authority, which is why banks, governments, and tech companies rely on it so heavily. Black is associated with sophistication, luxury, exclusivity, and control. Gold implies royalty, prestige, and elevated status.

Shapes and geometry affect perception as well. Circles create feelings of unity and wholeness. Triangles imply hierarchy, movement, force, ascension, and power. Eyes symbolize awareness, intelligence, surveillance, or omniscience. Spirals evoke transformation, evolution, and energetic movement. Even symmetry itself creates subconscious feelings of order and legitimacy.

This is marketing science, branding psychology, and behavioral influence. Perhaps modern institutions have simply rediscovered principles ancient civilizations already understood thousands of years ago.

Once you begin noticing symbolism, it becomes difficult to stop seeing it. Ancient archetypal imagery appears constantly throughout modern corporate branding, political campaigns, media companies, financial institutions, entertainment, and global organizations. The pyramid, the eye, the sun disk, the spiral, winged imagery, sacred geometry, and celestial symbolism continue appearing throughout modern visual culture in updated forms.

The sun is one of the oldest symbols in human history and represents illumination, rebirth, life force, divine authority, energy, and central power. Variations of solar symbolism appear everywhere in the modern world, from government imagery to corporate branding to political campaigns. Even Barack Obama’s campaign logo carried the imagery of a rising sun over a horizon, communicating hope, renewal, emergence, and collective movement toward a new era. Whether people consciously recognized the symbolism or not, they emotionally felt it.

Stars are one of the most common symbols used throughout corporate branding, national flags, military insignia, entertainment, and advertising because they subconsciously communicate ideas like excellence, prestige, authority, leadership, aspiration, and trust. Historically, stars guided navigation and represented light in darkness, which made them powerful symbols of guidance, destiny, and elevated status across many civilizations. Modern branding still taps into those same emotional associations today, using the archetype of the star to create feelings of importance, success, influence, and recognition within the subconscious mind.

Modern corporations understand something extremely important about the subconscious mind: repetition creates familiarity, and familiarity creates trust. The average person sees thousands of symbols, logos, slogans, and emotionally charged images every single day without consciously analyzing any of them. Over time, repeated exposure begins forming subconscious emotional associations tied to identity, status, desire, fear, safety, authority, or belonging.

This is also why modern media imagery becomes so psychologically powerful during times of collective crisis. During the COVID era, the now-famous spiked viral sphere became one of the most repeated symbols on Earth. It appeared endlessly across news broadcasts, social media, warning signs, government messaging, medical graphics, and public awareness campaigns. Over time, the image itself became emotionally charged with fear, danger, uncertainty, isolation, and emergency. The symbol evolved beyond information and became psychologically embedded into the collective subconscious through sheer repetition.

Perhaps this is why symbolism remains one of the most powerful forms of communication ever created. Symbols bypass intellectual defenses and communicate directly with emotion and memory. Human beings often believe they are operating primarily through logic, but much of human behavior is emotional-symbolic first and rational second.

And it would be naive to pretend modern institutions do not deeply understand subconscious influence, emotional conditioning, and symbolic communication. Entire industries exist to study exactly how imagery affects human perception and behavior.

The deeper realization may be that civilization itself operates through symbolic reinforcement. Nations are built around flags and myths. Religions revolve around sacred imagery and ritual. Luxury brands create symbolic status identities. Political movements rely on emotionally charged visuals and slogans. Social media itself functions almost entirely through symbolic compression: profile aesthetics, emojis, icons, verification badges, viral gestures, memes, and algorithmically repeated imagery.

The world speaks in symbols constantly. Most people simply never slow down long enough to notice it.

And perhaps that is why reclaiming symbolism on a personal level matters. Human beings have always created symbols tied to identity, intention, protection, healing, balance, family, and meaning. Personal sigils, meaningful artwork, sacred objects, rituals, or symbolic practices can act as reminders of focus and inner intention in a world saturated with externally imposed imagery competing constantly for attention and emotional influence.

At the deepest level, symbols are compressed meaning. They shape memory, emotion, perception, and collective identity. Ancient civilizations understood this. Modern corporations understand it too.

A general symbol communicates meaning that many people collectively recognize, like a cross, star, flag, heart, pyramid, or sun. Symbols often evolve culturally over long periods of time and carry shared emotional, psychological, and archetypal associations that human beings instinctively respond to whether consciously aware of it or not.

Looking deeper into sigils, however, reveals something more individualized and intention-based. Historically, sigils were designed to encode a specific intention, force, identity, desire, protection, or energetic focus into a unique symbolic form. Instead of representing a universally agreed-upon meaning, a sigil often carries meaning primarily to the individual or group who created it.

One day, I decided to create my own sigil, one that holds personal meaning to me while also representing something positive for the collective as a whole. Going forward, I’ll be embedding this sigil into some of the photos I create and share as a quiet expression of intention. The design itself probably doesn’t leave much guessing about the themes it represents, and for me it reconnects to certain hermetic principles that have become powerful influences in my life.

At the same time, one of the things I find most interesting about sigils is the idea that their deepest meaning is often kept private. The intention remains with the creator rather than being fully explained outwardly. In a world saturated with symbols competing constantly for attention, emotion, identity, fear, loyalty, and influence, perhaps there is also something powerful about consciously creating one of your own.

Maybe the real lesson here is not paranoia about symbols, but awareness. Once you begin recognizing how deeply symbolism shapes modern life, you start seeing the world differently. Advertising changes. Politics changes. Media changes. Even social media begins looking less like random noise and more like a constant psychological landscape built from imagery, repetition, emotion, and symbolic reinforcement.

Whether ancient civilizations understood these principles spiritually, psychologically, or energetically is open to interpretation, but modern institutions clearly understand the power of symbolism and emotional conditioning. Perhaps that is why reclaiming meaning for ourselves matters more than ever. In a world filled with symbols designed to influence human perception, there may be something deeply grounding about consciously creating symbols tied to personal intention, balance, healing, awareness, or protection instead of unconsciously absorbing whatever the modern world projects onto us.

Are Western Governments Quietly Converging Toward China’s Surveillance Model?

 

While mainstream media framed King Charles’s digital ID announcement as a routine modernization policy, events unfolding simultaneously in Beijing tell a far larger story. 

At the exact moment the British Crown was laying groundwork for expanded digital identity verification tied to work eligibility, financial systems, and online access, President Donald Trump and a delegation of America’s most powerful technology executives were seated at a state banquet with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Among them were Elon Musk, Tim Cook, Jensen Huang, and BlackRock CEO Larry Fink—figures whose companies collectively control the hardware, AI processing power, surveillance architecture, financial infrastructure, and data ecosystems capable of building a fully integrated digital society.

China is not merely another economic partner. It is the nation that pioneered large-scale social scoring, AI-assisted surveillance, biometric monitoring, and centralized digital governance. 

The timing of these parallel developments raises an unavoidable question: are Western governments and corporate power centers independently evolving toward the same system, or are we witnessing the synchronization of state policy and technological capability on a global scale?

Friday, May 15, 2026

Friday Frequency Flip!

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

Sometimes the most rebellious thing you can do in a world fueled by fear, outrage, division, and endless noise is to protect your own frequency.

As headlines compete for your nervous system and algorithms profit from emotional exhaustion, it becomes more important than ever to intentionally create moments of peace, stillness, beauty, and inner homeostasis.

This can be through: 

  • Music
  • A walk outside
  • Prayer
  • Deep breathing
  • Laughter
  • Sunlight
  • Silence
  • Creativity
  • Human connection

Whatever reminds you that you are still alive beneath the chaos.

Today’s “Friday Frequency Flip” is a beautiful piece by Elke Neher called “I Am My Highest Potential – Raise Your Vibration.”

Elke writes:

“This recording will help you to raise your vibration and step into the expression of your highest potential.”

She continues by reminding listeners that when we reconnect to ourselves internally, we stop living entirely through the pressure, expectations, and chaos of the outside world.

And maybe that’s part of the real battle right now.  Not just surviving physically, but protecting the soul from becoming emotionally numb, hopeless, bitter, or spiritually exhausted.

The world may sometimes feel cold and uncaring, but every act of kindness, compassion, encouragement, honesty, or love still matters. Energy spreads. So does calm, courage, and goodness.

And the more people who choose not to sink into hatred and despair, the more that energy quietly ripples outward into the lives of others.

Take care of yourself this weekend. Protect your mind and protect your energy.

And remember that becoming the highest version of yourself may be one of the most powerful forms of resistance left.


More articles you may enjoy:

Humming: The Sound That Tells Your Nervous System You Are Safe