Before reacting—before retreating into the familiar grooves of outrage or approval—let’s step back. Consider, for a moment, what it truly means to make someone great. Whether a leader or a lover, a parent or a pioneer—how does greatness actually emerge?
Nowhere has our concept of a reality split caused greater suffering than in the notion that even one human heart could be devoid of love. That evil could dwell at its center. That anyone, anywhere, is beyond redemption and that the solution is ever to withhold love.
If language creates reality, then the words we choose are not just semantics—they are power. To speak with precision is to cut through illusion. To name with care is to unmake cages.
When someone posts “Danger! Danger! Danger!”—that is tumescence.
When someone insists “There is absolutely no danger”—that is also tumescence.
When people declare ”They are crazy or dangerous”—both forms of tumescence meet.
Most people hold onto a sense of self they believe is fixed—an unchanging ‘me’ residing inside this body, or perhaps they think they are their thoughts.
The truth is that we are part of a fabric of ever changing interrelations.
I believe we are witnessing the emergence of a new era. From thesis and antithesis, a synthesis is forming. Those who seek to accelerate it know that to walk this path is to become an agent of healing.
If we are on an Erotic path, we take the circumstances that we clench against, that we block at any cost, and turn towards them.
We open as if they were a lover. We take them in.
Deep inside, every woman knows that the resource her power rests on is her sexuality. Yet not only does she fear her sexuality, she fears her power. And why wouldn’t she when the consequences of both are so real for a woman?
Fight always for. It’s that simple. Fight for the person you are fighting with and for the execution of your dharma (life purpose).