The world has taught us an upside-down version of how things actually work.
It has fed us a model of separation, of isolated individuals competing for limited resources, when in reality, everything is interconnected.
Women are the network. Imagine a motherboard, an intricate system of circuits and pathways, each communicating with the others.
Men are the conduits that move between them.
Women are the mycelial web that sustains the entire ecosystem, transmitting the flow of Eros from one to another. This surprises people. It challenges everything they’ve been taught about relationships, politics, and social structures. But when you see it—when you really see it—you can’t unsee it.
The problem is that we’ve been living in a world where women don’t know their power. And when even a few of the nodes in the network close off, the whole system is depleted of nutrients.
Without the mycelial network, the forest collapses. The trees, believing themselves sovereign, wither in their isolation. The soil depletes.
And that’s exactly what has happened—not just to the Earth itself but to humanity. Women have been severed from one another, pitted against each other in competition, taught to fight over a scarcity that isn’t even real.
Instead of circulating their Eros, they have been conditioned to hoard it, to channel it into closed systems that only serve to drain them.
We see the result everywhere: exhaustion, burnout, despair. But the solution is simple. Restore the network. Reactivate the flow.