Religious Quid Pro Quo.

If the carrot and stick philosophy has been openly used, preached, and discussed throughout our history—even in recent times—why are we making Quid Pro Quo such a big deal? Humans have employed politics since our earliest awareness, using it even to connect with God. This is why our religions lay claim to political and justice systems. To me, religions should remain purely spiritual; any political system that favors one group over others forsakes spirituality. While politics is necessary for governing systems, our belief systems should prohibit Quid Pro Quo due to its nature of deal-making. Heaven and hell represent a clear Quid Pro Quo; if you perceive even God using Quid Pro Quo, spirituality has been left out of your belief system.

This political phrase has permeated and continues to permeate most societies. While politics is essential for daily governance, our belief systems should remain pure, devoid of hidden agendas and falsehoods.

Political religions suggest that politics forms the basis of faith in God, presenting scenarios of heaven and hell. The concept of heaven and hell vividly promotes today’s popular term: Quid Pro Quo. This blog targets those who perceive God as purely spiritual and believe that politics should not infiltrate the spiritual realm. The carrot and stick, or heaven and hell, reflect human political traits seeping into our spirituality.

Does this imply there is no heaven and hell? I believe humans rise above mere animals because we possess the ability to self-regulate. This self-regulation originates from our spiritual side, allowing us to surpass even our genetics. If we acknowledge our evolution, why do we remain spiritually entrenched in the carrot and stick philosophy? Heaven and hell clearly symbolize the carrot and stick philosophy, or in other words, religious Quid Pro Quo.

Let’s examine this in more detail.

Today, this term is tossed around daily in the news. I thought it would be beneficial to use it as a blog title to elucidate its meanings.

In our spiritual realm, Quid Pro Quo does not and should not exist because God has dutifully provided every individual with a functional body and a conducive environment for life. Each human must use this body to live a mortal yet moral life, exercising free will. Belief in God is a personal choice. I aim to connect Quid Pro Quo with human politics to uphold God’s integrity. Our belief systems should be pure, devoid of politics, because God resides within them. How can one cleanse their belief system of Quid Pro Quo and question this politics?

Personally, I aim to purify my belief system of anything that blames God for our discriminatory and prejudiced politics. If successful, I would become a better human, avoiding blame, discrediting, and humanizing God as politically infected.

At a cellular level, we function individually, yet collectively, we function as humanity. Assuming that God, like a body or cell, punishes and rewards out of anger, akin to punishment and reward, clearly anthropomorphizes God.

By removing emotional and political aspects from religion, one discovers dissimilarities, just as a tree and its seed share a connection but aren’t identical. As individuals, we play vital roles in life’s larger scheme, akin to cells in a body. However, a cell cannot perceive the entire body without assuming its entirety. If you think otherwise, you must transcend your preconceived notions about God to see clearly and without bias.

Upon doing so, you’ll uncover a different spiritual world within yourself. Furthermore, you’ll discover your true identity and purpose in life. You’ll realize that life entails a duty of reciprocity. Interestingly, this duty does not mandate conformity, unlike bees or ants.

God does not punish us for failing to pray, disobedience, or committing crimes. Religions, on the other hand, preach a philosophy of Quid Pro Quo. To me, God belongs to the spiritual realm, which remains free from human political insecurities.

In human society, we devise crime and punishment for social justice and peace. If these were from God, no one would commit crimes; we’d be angelic, akin to ants or bees. Millions of people defy and disbelieve in God, committing spiritual crimes with impunity. Why? Because the spiritual realm lacks Quid Pro Quo. It is devoid of politics or bribery.

This invention stems from our insecure animal side, seeking security through group formation, which inherently involves Quid Pro Quo politics. Dragging God into our politics is not new; it’s been happening since our awareness of God. We’ve bestowed immense power upon God, yet depicted God as human-like, as we remain insufficiently evolved to transcend the politics of belonging.

Free will has been granted for a reason: to choose how to lead a mortal life. Examples abound—people living differently within families, societies, nations, and religions. As individuals evolve, they can judge their actions as good or bad. Interestingly, our perception of good and bad evolves with our own evolution.

Spiritual growth stems from understanding reciprocity as a mortal duty. This can occur only when one transcends the politics of belonging to their group and embraces humanity.

We possess both a history as creatures and a spiritual being. In everyday life, we encounter countless examples of this duality. We are influenced by whichever side we nurture and develop during our growth. If your love triangle remains intact, your spiritual side is strengthened. Otherwise, your animal side, geared towards survival, dominates your decisions and choices.

If you seize the opportunity to understand yourself better now, you’ll uncover your potential. You’ll learn to unlearn core imbalances and emerge as a spiritual entity (read: love triangle).

If you view natural disasters as divine punishment for devilish actions, this article isn’t for you. However, if you’re open-minded and curious, it’s worth a read.

I believe humanity evolves under God’s guidance.

Individually, we may not sprout wings or horns, but our evolution is perpetual. We’ve made great strides in science, technology, and medicine, yet we grapple with emotional and spiritual intelligence. Our imbalance causes considerable distress; shouldn’t we strive for balanced evolution?

In the animal kingdom, alpha creatures reign. In human societies, even alphas may falter, forced to accept scraps due to power shifts. Law and order—essentially, Big Brother—intervenes, yet the politics of belonging can corrupt even Big Brother, akin to God. A keen observer can discern that power persists, protecting the powerful, regardless of alpha or beta status. Ideally, Big Brother should safeguard the weak, yet the one percent receives protection instead. To clarify, I do not advocate socialism or communism, as these systems fail to ensure equal justice for all. I advocate spirituality, which demands justice for all. If an individual can challenge a group and attain justice, that is spirituality.

Humanity has long been embroiled in turmoil. Our systems—constitutions and religious rules—leave no room for evolution, designed to maintain order without ensuring equal justice or human rights. The new phenomenon in humanity is the universal desire for equal human rights, transcending geographical boundaries.

We’ve established some order in human societies, yet the struggle against hierarchy persists, reminiscent of our cave-dwelling days where the alpha thrived. Although better than cave life, we’re troubled by those advocating change and those clinging to an idealized past, bereft of evolutionary potential. We’re torn apart individually and face societal injustice. Politically powerful individuals manipulate ordinary folks, even invoking God and religion, manipulating justice through coercion and bribery. Today, discussions revolve around wealth concentration in the one percent, despite tax systems and governance. What ails us? What are the root causes? What are the solutions?

First of all, we have to acknowledge that we are creatures who have two sides within our core. Second, our physical side, or what you can call our animal side, and our spiritual side, or what you can call our human side, should be in balance. Remember, one can’t live without the other, so we are stuck in this situation until we evolve further to create balance.

Our animal side is full of creature-type insecurities, which drive us to hoard wealth, from mattresses to offshore investments in tax havens. It is all related to our animal side’s need for security. Yet, our spiritual side preaches the understanding that there is no security for mortal beings; life is about using money to live with quality. This quality can vary widely, so choose wisely how you live. If you prefer your current lifestyle, continue, but try to understand spiritual rule number one: do not do to others what you would not want done to yourself or your loved ones.

Despite evolving for eons, we still struggle to self-regulate and live peacefully, engaging in a mortal life of give and take. It’s obvious that we need resources to fill our stomachs, which in turn helps us become spiritually aware. Always remember, our spirituality depends on a full stomach. If more people go hungry, there is less left for the weak and vulnerable. This problem has persisted since our days in the jungle. Many people, regardless of religious beliefs, still adhere to a dog-eat-dog philosophy. A society that fails to care for its weak and vulnerable cannot be considered healthy. Our trouble lies in our tendency to take everything to extremes—believing staunchly in total capitalism, socialism, communism, or even democracy can sometimes be destructive.

When Big Brother assists the weak and vulnerable, some still label it unfair and socialist. If individuals are helped to hoard resources, others call it unfair and capitalist. As mortals, we are all essentially renters; claiming ownership is impractical and absurd because all material possessions are left behind when we depart. Yes, you can leave things behind for your family, but you still must leave. We have systems in place for land ownership after death, yet every major city in the world has living, breathing homeless individuals.

Like animals marking their territory for resources in the bush, we as humans still exhibit this mentality, despite our awareness of personal mortality. Other creatures are not aware of their mortality, so they live as they see fit. We, however, have evolved to understand that our time on Earth is temporary. This knowledge should have transformed our behaviors beyond mere animal instincts, yet we have not fully reached that point. Until we do, the best solution for our society is to create balance through an equal human rights-based justice system.

If we follow this path, we can reduce personal extremism within our families and groups, eventually clearing it from human societies as well. When an individual can take a group to court and win based on human rights, it represents progress and a significant step in the right direction. In essence, whether dealing with a group or an individual, they should all be treated with equal spiritual justice. Remember, do not do to anyone what you would not want done to yourself or your loved ones.

Certainly, Big Brother must care for the masses, but a political system favoring one over the other is biased and not based on equality. Our religions and isms have failed us spiritually because they could not balance justice between the masses and individuals—they often sided with the masses. While this may seem logical, it is not fair; hence, I deem it political rather than spiritual.

Most of us are born with able bodies, so reciprocity should not be politicized; it is our duty as individuals. If we rely on God or others to secure our share, it contradicts individual spirituality. Hoarding and causing others to starve or suffer may not be considered a social crime, but it is certainly a spiritual one.

Our collectively created but invisible Big Brother is akin to God, drawing power from living, breathing individuals. Therefore, the value of the individual should always be paramount in our governing systems. Take a critical look at our governing and belief systems and discover for yourself how quid pro quo permeates everything we do. Politically, it may be acceptable to some, but spiritually, it defies the law.

In earlier, less evolved times, we did not have God or Big Brother; strength determined power. Today, things have become more complex, with power no longer in the hands of individuals. Some people are hesitant to relinquish their guns because they feel vulnerable without them and mistrust Big Brother. Should one give up guns? It’s a matter of perception and spiritual awareness—how comfortable are you living in the Wild West of modern-day humanity?

Our dilemma is that we willingly surrender our power to Big Brother—or rather, to the select few who politically control Big Brother. Our resources flow to those few who believe that embracing animal instincts for survival is acceptable. We will not find solutions until we evolve to the next spiritual level, where we do not commit injustices against individuals while caring for the masses simultaneously. With strong instincts for individual survival and divisive present-day politics of “us versus them,” fixing humanity will not be easy unless we evolve individually to the next level.

This next level involves bringing spiritual strength to an equal level with our animal side, internally as individuals and collectively as humanity. We must care for not only our family members but also humanity as a whole. Some of us, as creatures or animals, have not evolved enough to recognize that those who go hungry or fall ill are part of humanity. Human responsibilities involve reciprocity; it is not required by God but necessary for assisting the needy among us, as God draws divine strength and value from healthy, happy human beings. If everyone takes but no one gives, the entire spiritual or divine system collapses.

With our governing systems, Big Brother has joined God and the Devil in ruling humanity. However, times are changing rapidly. Equal human rights have emerged as a strong, competing force, now demanded by ordinary individuals and groups worldwide.

Humanity has begun to combat prejudice and discrimination, leaning toward democracies over other forms of governance. Where humanity will stand in a few decades is anyone’s guess, but awareness and awakening are positive signs. Our times demand rapid evolution. Climate change is a reality, yet some political leaders, ignoring climate-related extremes, refuse to cooperate due to politics. They must come to an agreement and work together before climate refugees flee their homelands.

With Big Brother’s advent, we now have three invisible entities: God and the Devil dominated our early evolutionary days, but today’s society deems Big Brother equally influential.

Historically, the Devil and God arose from the strong desires of the weak, spawning organized religions. Curiously, the removal of God and the Devil is now achieving the same effect. Communism, socialism, and even democracy emerged from the desires of the weak to unite and aid one another.

Right or wrong, our evolution is independent of our nature; we will evolve, whether we desire it or not. Like-minded people will unite and strive for strength, but they will remain a group, not humanity as a whole.

The fundamental desire for strength is linked to awareness, but when undesirable side effects surface, we recognize them and strive for change. Another issue is that some of us wish to change while others resist. Thus, we create divisions within groups, further fragmenting humanity. Today, humanity comprises around two hundred countries and an organization—the United Nations—operating much like our societies. A few strong individuals govern, while the majority are weak. How can we unite as one humanity when every nation harbors internal groups? We also have religions and their sects, fiercely protecting their identities, and democracies with their divisions into political parties. From the beginning of communal awareness, we have divided and gathered. Modern democracies prove our ability to overcome differences—just look at the diversity of belief systems within human societies, especially during cultural events like Canada’s folklore time. Everyone is free to promote and showcase their traditions and customs without prejudice or discrimination. This freedom exists thanks to laws founded on equal human rights. When individuals evolve to accept others as equals, transcending group politics that preach prejudice and discrimination, true progress occurs. Yet, we still have a long way to go; even the United Nations employs a veto system based on prejudice and discrimination, despite its global membership.

Consider the journey of our incomplete, evolving process. Humanity has embarked on this journey for a very long time, experiencing numerous changes—from groups led by strong alpha leaders in the bush to divisions based on race, nation, and religion. We shifted from individual power to group power, then to regional governing bodies, nations, and religions. Our individual strength has been compromised as group mentality has thrived, making the emergence of Big Brother inevitable. Some today oppose Big Brother, but most desire police forces and government authority. Examine your society and determine if quid pro quo is a legitimate political necessity. Whether you agree or not, ponder its implications for your belief system—spiritually, quid pro quo is a crime.

SPIRITUAL CLAP

Why can it not be both spirituality and physicality? We have been taught that God is a charitable runner, and we are nothing more than receivers and beggars of that charity. We have been fed this misinformation for eons, accepting it unquestioningly, often manipulated politically, particularly when following extreme religious rhetoric or the politics of group belonging.

Let’s start by considering ourselves as physical parts of a complete spiritual picture. As physical beings, we possess significantly more brainpower compared to other creatures of similar size, with the potential for further growth. The question arises: why? Upon closer inspection, several reasons come to mind.

The first reason, not only factual but an undeniable reality, is that we have been, are, and will continue to evolve until we reach our potential. Since we are continually learning new things every day, it is indisputable that, as humans, we are still in the process of evolution. Now, the main question is: evolving to what and to whom? This leads to even more questions. If that is the case, then why and by whom? Why have we been or are still unable to use our full brainpower? If we are constantly learning new things, it’s a clear sign that we are not utilizing the full capacity of our brainpower, so where does our ignorance stem from? Why do we perpetually fight and kill each other over our knowledge? Why do genetically similar individuals create, break, follow, or question all sorts of rules? Why do God and the politics of group belonging affect people differently? Could it be due to undiscovered genetic differences or is it related to acquired education? How far have we come and how much further do we have to go to reach our potential? Would we ever cease fighting or killing each other over our differences even after reaching our potential?

Despite our desires, our inability to know everything can be frustrating, but fortunately, spirituality can simplify things for us as individuals while we are still in the process of evolution. However, unfortunately, we begin to use ego-driven assumptions to fill the gap, which interestingly arise from the politics of group belonging. Therefore, it would be an assumption to say that with evolution, we will become peace-loving people.

Speaking egotistically, passionately, and forcefully about God is not new and, to me, it has not been, is not, and will never be synonymous with spirituality because it is connected to our physical emotions, such as loyalty to our groups. Even if these emotions originate from thoughts, human emotions are uniquely blended and attached to the physical or animalistic side of our bodies. Since the body is emotionally connected to the politics of group belonging, we not only strive to instill our knowledge within our group but also try to spread it to opposing and confronting groups.

Religions and democracies are no exception. We tend to believe that our religious texts and constitutions are unquestionably paramount for human welfare. We have attempted to recruit and sometimes forcibly coerce others to join our groups. Even our religions actively send missionaries to convert others to our belief systems with strings attached. Our religions openly declare that we will be rewarded by God in heaven if we convert others to our faith. Considering that our knowledge has been, is, and will always be evolving, we as individuals and groups should be adaptable to change.

When faced with unresolved knowledge-related issues, we usually resort to relying on thousands-of-years-old religious texts with a wide variety of interpretations. We fight to maintain or alter our centuries-old imperfect constitutions as guidelines, regardless of how modern our problems are. If we cannot find answers, we fabricate them along the way and passionately enforce them.

Logically, if you have computer or internet-related problems, you seek someone knowledgeable about computers. If you end up going to a mullah or priest, they may not have solutions to your problems but they will egotistically claim that it’s not a path of God, thus questionable and incorrect. If you still decide to seek solutions from the past, you may not evolve or keep pace with the demands of the times. It would be akin to riding a horse and buggy in today’s cities. While it may seem charming as a vintage novelty or environmentally friendly, it certainly isn’t faster than a car, making it less competitive or efficient in saving time. In today’s world, there are likely people who would oppose using animals for transportation as well. The point being, we have always had and will continue to have differences of opinion. An old story comes to mind, and since it is old, I cannot tell you who the author is. It goes:

“A man thinks, as he enters the mosque, ‘If I drive a nail into the ground, those who come with their horses can tie them up while they spend time in the mosque without worrying about them.’ So, he drives a sufficiently large nail into the ground. Yet another man sees this and says, ‘What a foolish idea! Someone could trip over it and get hurt.’ So he removes it. Now, the question arises: who is right? Our history is full of such incidents. It’s not about being right or wrong; it’s about their intentions. Therefore, let’s cut each other some slack and learn to discuss the reasoning behind our actions. If we can discuss good intentions, we are less likely to fight over them.

If we do not evolve with time, we are left behind, quite literally. We cannot aid humanity’s progress, explore space, produce life-saving medicines, donate blood, or terminate an unhealthy fetus that could eventually threaten the mother’s life. From horses to horse-drawn carriages, from cars to planes, and from space stations onward, none of this has occurred due to adhering to our past education. It’s all because of our liberalism, and most of our advances related to evolution have come from those who dared to challenge religious rules.

In the past, we had an average lifespan of thirty-eight years, for heaven’s sake! Consider it with an open mind and recognize the effects of our evolution. To some extent, we all have had and continue to exhibit some barbaric traits, so the job is not yet finished, but things are better than before. Beheading is no longer common, except for a few present-day examples, and humanity, for the most part, has evolved, and progress is being made. We can now grant or receive equal human rights, or at least, they are gaining popularity in all human societies.

Remember, we all have an individual need for spiritual well-being, which is why religions still exist in societies worldwide. Certainly, politics has complicated matters, but religions do speak about spirituality. As individuals, we have a desire to have a sip of spiritual intoxication, or in other words, godly inebriation. Whether the drink is a brand-name or not, it serves the purpose of intoxicating the individual, hence we are drawn to that high, and most often, our politically-laced religious drink is a brand-name.

Our problem lies in our inability to distinguish between a social drink of spirituality and the politically tainted intoxication of religious extremism. In reality, a social drink embodies spiritual fulfillment or intoxication, not the most advertised brand of it. With brand-name, politically-related intoxication, we create double standards for competing groups and become divisive. We become prejudiced and discriminatory towards each other and even towards those within the same religion who do not follow religious rules.

Consider this factual reality: we expect, and indeed have different standards for children and adults in our everyday social interactions, yet intriguingly, we place God and human individuals in the same category. I am all for granting children a reprieve so they are not penalized or treated like adults, but metaphorically equating God and a human individual does not sit well with me. Even I am guilty of this at times, using it to argue that we should take responsibility for our actions and acknowledge our place in the grand scheme of life.

We claim that God punishes and subjects people to a metaphorical living hell during their lifetime if they do not comply with religious rules, and even after death, non-believers or rule-breakers will be punished. If they worship only God, they will be rewarded. This is where I diverge from this philosophy for two reasons. First and foremost, no one can prove this with repeatable factual studies or video evidence. Second, if all of God’s work is already being done by individuals through their actions, why would God punish them? As human beings, we are already doing God’s work, so why would God punish us? To me, it simply does not make sense, other than to instill fear in the hearts of followers. Not only does this make life measurable for individuals, it also tarnishes God’s reputation, in my opinion. When we are weak, we seek strength from God; when we feel insecure, we seek security; and so on. The question is, why does God not show up for everyone? There are many who would testify that God did not show up when needed most. Does this mean I question God’s existence? Not at all. I am attempting to illustrate that God transcends human traits, and attempting to equate God with human characteristics is like trying to revert a fully-grown tree back into the seed from which it grew. While this may produce billions of seeds, it cannot revert to its original seed form.

We are taught that God is both vengeful and forgiving, just as human beings can be. We comprehend human life, but we assume too much about God, as if God were a human being. When it comes to human understanding, we will eventually recognize our place as well. Thus far, an advanced or higher form of life is beyond our comprehension, so we assume shamelessly and egotistically, to the point of becoming angry with one another over disagreements.

Assuming about God is not akin to understanding scientific facts; it’s more of a guess based on assumptions. Therefore, fighting or killing each other over assumptions is unfortunate and absurd. We simply can’t assume God has human traits. To me, seeds do not resemble a tree, just as a human cell does not resemble a human body. This is a scientifically proven fact.

Why do we assume that God is like a human being? Is it possible that humanity as a whole is God, and that humanity is evolving with the help of each individual, while each individual is evolving with humanity simultaneously? If we can move beyond the notion that God is somewhere out there in space, we might learn to value each human individual, seeing God in all of us regardless of our differences.

Through our evolution, we now understand that harsh punishments are barbaric and ineffective in the long run, especially with the increasing popularity of equal human rights today. The death penalty is being debated and has been removed from the justice systems of most civilized societies. Many Muslim societies no longer practice amputation for theft or stoning to death for extramarital sex. Why was it acceptable in the past but not in present times? This is what I call evolution. We do not develop larger heads with horns or grow wings; instead, we expand our knowledge and transform our world both externally and internally.

Now, the question arises: is this evolution a product of our spiritual imagination related to God, or are we physically assisting God’s evolution from an assumed barbaric entity? I firmly believe that both aspects, spiritual and physical, are inseparable. You may draw your own conclusions as an individual.

If you place God on a pedestal and consider yourself insignificant, you are following religious teachings. If you dismiss any entity beyond yourself, you are relying on assumptions that fail to acknowledge the reality that even your next breath is not entirely within your control, revealing an egotistical human behavior.

Today, our misguided perceptions are falling like dominoes. We no longer believe that every thunderclap signifies God’s anger, nor do we attribute natural disasters solely to divine punishment. We no longer believe the Earth is flat. Instead, we are utilizing scientific knowledge to explore space and other planets, and we are actively addressing environmental issues like global warming and ozone depletion. We are connecting the dots, learning about earthquakes, and constructing buildings according to seismic zones. We have, are, and will continue to pave the way for further human evolution in all fields as time progresses.

Regardless of whether people believe in God, somewhat believe, or don’t believe at all, we have the capacity to coexist in civilized societies. Information technology and the internet accelerate the spread of ideas, eventually eradicating prejudices and discrimination in cultures where they still linger. Equal rights are grounded in spiritual principles such as treating others as you wish to be treated or as you love yourself and your family.

I believe in God, not as a distant entity, but because I observe things unfolding and sustaining themselves without constant human intervention, especially when it comes to personal survival. We must approach life with curiosity and respect, not just for ourselves but for all life. To achieve this, we must act responsibly as spiritually evolved individuals, transcending the divisive politics of group identities.

Humanity is not a random occurrence but a complex entity, much like a coral reef where diversity exists within unity. If we fail to recognize ourselves in this context, we risk contributing to our own destruction. Humanity has been on this path for too long; it’s time to evolve to the next level.

Let’s examine life through the lens of mathematical and scientific accuracy and the intricacies of the living world around us. Personally, this points towards the existence of God. While it may not be as proven as scientific facts, we are constantly learning. Our knowledge is continually evolving, and whether through religion or science, wisdom is essential for navigating mortal life and creating balance in every aspect.

In my understanding, life encompasses several facets with a mortal nature, akin to overseeing various departments as a CEO—an individual responsibility.

As CEOs of our lives, we must discern whether a belief system meets our spiritual needs or provides emotional satisfaction. The essence of spirituality lies in nurturing our souls, fostering happiness and contentment, irrespective of our mortality or eventual end. To lead a fulfilled mortal life, we must seek diverse knowledge. While some may find satisfaction solely in scientific facts, it’s their prerogative. Yet, to me, fulfillment spans across multiple domains, enriching the vastness of human existence. Focusing exclusively on one aspect while neglecting others leads to a life akin to a department head rather than that of a CEO—devoid of fulfillment, happiness, or discontent.

Endowed with free will, our differences in choices are rights. Those who seek rights for themselves must, by default, extend the same to others. Regrettably, human societies have yet to universally embrace this principle. Persistent issues like racial, gender, national, religious biases, even in the age of the internet, attest to our struggle against prejudice and discriminatory politics.

Choosing to live a life devoid of satisfaction is a personal choice, a gift we each possess—to live as we see fit. Personally, I prefer to keep an open mind, finding spiritual fulfillment in believing in God while also embracing the paths illuminated by scientific facts, ensuring I lack nothing in any area of my life by choice.

Consider this: Today, we scientifically understand how plants grow and defend themselves with chemicals against pests—a survival strategy. While scientifically enhancing plant yield through genetic modification may seem economically prudent, its long-term implications warrant scrutiny. This dilemma echoes the proverbial “nail in front of the mosque.”

Similarly, in medicine, practices evolve—mercury, once a prescribed remedy, is now recognized as a lethal poison. Despite advancements, prescription drugs, touted for their scientific rigor, come with significant side effects, contributing to overdose fatalities—a dual-edged sword akin to the mosque’s nail, depending on perspective.

My stance is clear: Whether rooted in science or belief systems, we must assess our practices’ long-term impacts. I hold human knowledge in high regard but challenge the hubris of those claiming omniscience based on assumptions.

Extreme adherence to belief systems historically correlates with unquantifiable casualties—a lesson mirrored in our evolving scientific understanding. Despite meticulous research, the toll of extreme beliefs persists, from war machinery to drug interactions—a soLet’s refrain from delving too deeply into the vast cosmos and instead focus on the intricacies of the human individual’s inner space—a realm housing ten trillion cells and a hundred trillion bacteria, both beneficial and harmful. Do we exert complete control over this microcosm? If so, why do illness and mortality persist? Clearly, we are still in the process of understanding. Should we then presume to possess all-encompassing knowledge to assert control or confirm the existence of God? Do we truly grasp the extent of what there is to know? It appears that both extremes passionately claim omniscience, a debate as old as our awareness itself. Despite our accumulated knowledge, awareness, and progress, we remain unable to fully comprehend ourselves enough to cease the unnecessary violence over our uncertainties.

Taking a critical look at ourselves not only aids in grasping the realities of mortal life but also guides us in exploring the benefits of faith. Embracing spirituality not bound by political agendas opens pathways to appreciating the significance of all facets of life.

Our existence transcends mere adherence to religious doctrines; it necessitates an understanding of their purpose. Living in the present requires us to integrate scientific knowledge responsibly. Beyond false confidence and inflated self-esteem, true understanding demands ego-free functioning. This approach fosters a broader comprehension of humanity beyond religion, nationalism, science, and technology, helping us understand why individuals commit acts of violence that rob others of their loved ones.

Understanding that as humans, we do not function in isolation but rather as a blend of physicality and spirituality is crucial. We are unique entities—neither purely animal nor spirit—imbued with free will, a personal sense of justice, and compassion.

Human life, however, remains shrouded in mysteries; our imagination, integral as oxygen, fuels our evolution. Many of our breakthroughs across various fields stem from imaginative leaps, manifesting in tangible realities through our collective efforts. Yet, the simplicity of this process belies its complexities, potentially exacerbating personal emotional issues. Our thought processes hinge not only on internal and external influences but also on maintaining equilibrium—an aspect beyond our control.

Achieving internal and external harmony is paramount for our survival. The slightest imbalance can compromise our well-being and, at times, our very lives. Given our free will, we often succumb to self-destructive tendencies fueled by our powerful yet presumptuous ignorance.

This ignorance impedes our ability to comprehend all the elements at play, including our own place in the broader scheme of life. Acknowledging our incomplete understanding across all facets of life may pose spiritual challenges, yet accepting our imperfection can alleviate the stress of daily existence.

Logically, a divine hand operating in silence necessitates human intervention. Spiritual elements, including thoughts, remain ineffectual until humans translate them into physical actions—a fact underscored by everyday living, including modern practices.

Consider this analogy: If you engage in charitable endeavors without profit, expanding beyond your personal capacity necessitates enlisting assistance. What role should those you hire play? Clearly, their duty lies in aiding the charitable cause, not merely appeasing you. Similarly, God administers the world like a charity, devoid of profit-seeking motives, instead focusing on answering and fulfilling prayers. However, achieving this requires both physical and spiritual actions, as a purely spiritual entity lacks the ability to perform physical tasks consistently—relying solely on miracles.

Contrary to human societal norms where ass-kissing may yield benefits, such tactics hold no sway in the spiritual realm. Our assumptions, particularly regarding God’s thoughts mirroring human behaviors, fall short. Similarly, the assumption that God necessitates flattery is flawed.

Considering that God provides circumstances for life and sustenance, we must question why. This query is directed not at non-believers but at devout adherents who fervently worship yet undervalue action-based spirituality.

Each of us lives due to circumstances beyond personal control, suggesting a purpose. To me, that purpose transcends servility or bribery; it signifies a mutual partnership based on reciprocal action—fundamental to spiritual obligations. The origin, purpose, and role of prayer and worship remain questions worth discussing with religious leaders. Rituals common across organized religions serve to unify like-minded individuals, showcasing group strength and fostering cohesion, sometimes at the expense of individual autonomy.

Being compassionate toward others isn’t confined to religious doctrine; it’s a universal responsibility, regardless of belief.

So, where do concepts like heaven and hell fit in? Do we still view ourselves as trainable creatures akin to pets, necessitating a carrot-and-stick approach? Why haven’t we evolved to self-regulate, embracing spiritual rules like the Golden Rule or empathy instead of imposing our views on others? Are we so indoctrinated that we consider ourselves sinners, warranting heaven’s greed or hell’s fear to maintain order?

Genetic predisposition shapes us, yet education further influences our actions. Individual health, encompassing physical, mental, and spiritual aspects, dictates our capabilities and limitations.

Life’s circumstances determine whether we queue at soup kitchens or ascend to CEO positions, shaped by the aforementioned factors. Most of us reside somewhere in the middle, capable of influencing our daily lives. However, belittling oneself by relinquishing personal responsibility makes one susceptible to political manipulation.

If physically capable, one shouldn’t merely seek sustenance or engage in repetitive worship. Reciprocity is every individual’s responsibility. I do not aim to disparage beliefs or undermine human predicaments. Rather, I present a viewpoint shared by many, albeit expressed differently. Patience and understanding are essential as I articulate my perspective.

I advocate for reciprocal responsibility as equal partners with God. Consider this: In a partnership where one partner fails to contribute, would you remain subservient indefinitely? Reflect on this query, examining your beliefs and relationship with God earnestly. If you worship and pray as prescribed, while also reciprocating, it’s your prerogative. However, relying on worship and prayer alone, expecting divine and human intervention, denotes spiritual deficiency. Despite possessing physical abilities, expecting others, including God, to shoulder your burden reflects a misguided strategy ingrained through societal conditioning.

You may seem successful in material pursuits, but spiritual fulfillment transcends tangible gains. Knowing oneself holistically—physically, mentally, and spiritually—enhances overall well-being, essential given our mortal nature. Whether or not you acknowledge a divine presence, understanding your internal essence is paramount. Neglecting this awareness jeopardizes personal satisfaction and contentment, overriding superficial pursuits.

God, like government or the human body’s cells, possesses the power to aid individuals, drawing strength from them as well. Therefore, never underestimate your significance in the grand tapestry of life.bering reminder of our collective fallibility.

Gazing into space, our ability to prevent celestial catastrophes illustrates our limited control. Who sustains Earth as a living planet if not us? Certainly not through our flawed understanding, potentially exacerbating global warming via fossil fuel use. Our living planet isn’t a capricious cosmic trick but a testament to our incomplete knowledge, urging us to evolve.

Should one give a different name to God? Sure, it can be done, but the facts remain the same. Since our actions shape even the character of God for us, we should delve deeper into ourselves to grasp God’s essence. Does this imply that God possesses human traits? This question has persisted, persists, and will endure until we evolve to our fullest potential. For now, we are in a phase of evolution, needing godly attributes to advance as enlightened beings.

Let’s initiate this understanding by acknowledging the politics surrounding our sense of belonging to various groups. Our actions are so influenced that we even use politics to justify our insecurities linked to devilish behaviors. From acceptance to denial and back to acceptance, this cycle has persisted since we became aware that events don’t revolve exclusively around us. This spiritual applause resounds chiefly for individuals, as they grapple with self-awareness within life’s grand scheme.

The politics of belonging has governed us individually, profoundly impacting our actions. Regardless of our personal political beliefs, we must recognize that collectively, we serve as both a living tool for God and the Devil. Therefore, scrutinizing our group politics before acting becomes imperative for personal comfort.

As mentioned earlier, our sense of belonging’s political dimension is potent enough to sway individuals into sacrificing comfort or even life knowingly. To me, it all ties back to the strength or weakness of an individual’s personal belief system. True belief in God enables one to perceive their own worth. Recognizing this worth allows us to ascend the metaphorical ladder, forging not merely a communal but a personal connection with God.

By connecting these dots, one discovers that God relies directly on individuals to carry out His spiritual work. Realizing this should bolster self-respect, fostering comfort in one’s own skin.

Governments and religions, as ruling bodies, cannot allow this realization to take root. If individuals feel weak or vulnerable, they seek solace in community, fostering unwavering loyalty to nation and religion. This interdependency hinges on pure political power, safeguarding the group. This spiritual injustice often goes unexamined, assuming that individual empowerment threatens group stability, prompting sacrifices of individual rights.

Politically sound yet spiritually unjust, injustice persists whether between groups or between individuals and groups. Politics pertain to the animal side of human nature, connecting insecurities with group strength, while our spiritual side establishes direct, individual links with God. It’s not just about love or obedience to God; it’s about fairness to both God and oneself. Utilizing all our faculties entails recognizing our essence as humans. Understanding our humanity is an individual task, though group politics often dictate conformity and control.

Our groups are inherently political; whether nationalist or religious, they harbor covert political agendas. Hence, in traditional religions, direct access to God eludes the individual. Purity is demanded even before prayer, as if humanity were unworthy of God’s attention. To me, if God cannot aid His people without human intermediaries, then equal respect for individuals is warranted. Why must organized religions rely on intermediaries? This setup resembles a kingdom where the commoners cannot approach the king directly.

Group politics taint spirituality, preventing religions from attaining purity. Consequently, they fail to eradicate prejudice and discrimination, despite professing to lead to God. Such biases not only pit groups against each other but also breed internal discord. History abounds with religious conflicts; within Christianity and Islam, sects have waged wars spanning centuries. Ironically, adherents of the same faith often display greater fervor against each other than against outsiders.

If one is told that God favors some over others—bluntly or otherwise—it implies exclusion. According to exclusive religions, God ceases to be a spiritual entity, becoming a political figure. When individuals acquire the knowledge to distinguish between politics and spirituality, they enter a rational, yet authentic, spiritual paradigm, exposing the political biases plaguing religions. Only then can religions shed prejudice and discrimination.

Individual frailty and communal strength interplay, perpetuating bias and discrimination. Humanity remains divided by race, gender, religion, and nationality, all driven by security politics. Is this pursuit cloaked in the guise of peace? Each of us must reflect before seeking God’s path, for blending political differences with God disrupts tranquility. Humanity has not achieved unity in two millennia, and current global affairs suggest another two millennia may pass before true harmony is achieved.

Politics are essential for communities, but our true path lies in evolution beyond community-mindedness. This transformation begins by embracing a spiritual journey over a political one, arming ourselves with hope and optimism. Such spiritual fortitude enables us to navigate life’s challenges without succumbing. A weak individual seeks security within nations and religions, hindering global unity; mortals find no security save through spiritual strength.

Educational foundations of political religions evolve into teachings of arrogance, ignorance, prejudice, and discrimination. They preach God’s omnipotence while branding human individuals as inherently sinful or insignificant. They proclaim humanity’s need for God, yet overlook that God needs humanity as much as our bodies need cells to function and thrive. Though individuals may seem insignificant, our bodies, born of cells, cease without replication.

Spirituality cannot resonate without merging with physicality; the bond between God and human transcends all man-made political systems. This spiritual resonance lacks meaning without human embodiment—the conduit for this bond. Disregard this, and the entire belief system collapses. Religious beliefs, perched precariously, are prodded by human insecurities and control desires, undermining logic.

Prayer, fasting, and charitable acts offer spiritual solace, but their true value lies in their impact on others. Are these actions genuine or driven by the desire to fit in or garner admiration? If so, it presumes to deceive God, yet self-examination reveals God dwells within, inseparable.

Your actions and sacrifices, swayed by the politics of belonging, may portray God as an external entity. Yet, ask how God knows your deepest secrets? The answer lies within; God resides within each individual, else guilt would not afflict us. As you peer through godly eyes, avoid inner turmoil; regulate your life without need for carrot-and-stick philosophy. For those who reach this juncture, heaven’s allure or hell’s fear holds no sway.

Our religions have endeavored to guide human beings purely as spiritual entities, attempting in vain to suppress our animalistic side. As an individual, you are inherently human, so living authentically means embracing rather than suppressing your animal nature, fostering inner harmony. Being torn apart internally is a place no one should reside. It’s a battle you cannot win; for millions of years, despite strict rules and religious doctrines of reward and punishment, this inner conflict persists. Our animal side holds considerable power due to its inherent legitimacy. If not approached with respect, personal suffering invariably follows.

This interplay of spirituality and physicality underscores the quest for inner peace. To achieve this, one must understand their animal side beyond religious teachings. Your peaceful existence matters more than your preacher might realize.

As mentioned, your animal side holds critical cards, but it cannot thrive without the spiritual side. Spirituality, in turn, needs a physical vessel—the domain of the animal side. For human beings, it’s not a choice between one or the other but finding a balance between both. This equilibrium defines our relationship with ourselves, with God, and how we navigate the world until our last days. What happens after death remains uncertain, making it imperative to grasp your nature and take responsibility as a human being—not merely as a spirit or an animal.

One certainty is that to manifest spiritual ideals, one must be alive and physically active. Speculating about heaven or hell is futile; arguing, fighting, or killing over it is plainly misguided.

Achieving this personal understanding and recognizing your inherent value are essential. Once you comprehend deeply that you are a part of the Almighty, spiritual strength can balance every aspect of your life. Rather than hiding behind divine or devilish attributions for personal failings, you’ll confront the politics of group identity with free will and personal justice, finding comfort in your mortal existence.

Failing to transcend the politics of belonging stems from underdeveloped personal identity. Embrace your independent nature endowed with God-given free will, not merely shaped by external influences. Dig deep within to discover the human CEO whose umbilical cord was severed at birth—a symbol of our innate freedom and independence. To be a self-sufficient entity with free will, personal justice, and compassion is the gift we bring from birth.

Utilize these gifts during your mortal years; understanding reciprocal duty ensures you can’t falter. Heaven and hell are paradigms of reward and punishment; whether religious or not, your ability to self-regulate makes you accountable to God, people, and yourself.

(Read Love Triangle) Long ago, I wrote about the core of this love triangle—the animal and spiritual sides. Divided into three corners—passionate love, instinctive love, and universal love—it forms a triangle, each part creating the noise of the clap. The core represents animal and spirit. Birthed of love and encased in the love of our people, we each arrive in life. Today, we focus on this central triangle, where spirit and animal coexist in every human life. Both are sacred, together forming the spiritual and physical clap.

We’ve erred by condemning, controlling, and attempting to extinguish our animal side without acknowledging its importance. Silence without it renders us impotent and lifeless; a living, breathing human requires a physical body.

God, spirituality, and humanity require physical form to hold meaning. Without human action, both God’s work and human endeavors cease. Picture an aging body, where cells deteriorate faster than they renew—what future awaits? It’s inevitable; we grasp our mortality. Our towns lie deserted without people; value diminishes, akin to our body without new cells. Respect must permeate to the cellular level.

Physicality is as crucial as spirituality; debates or doctrines about life after death are inherently political. Religion or science, the living years of each individual matter most, for both personal and universal reasons.

Religious teachings preach submission, attributing actions to God or the Devil. However, as humans, our physical bodies empower us to carry out these actions. Without our input, both lose potency; physicality drives their impact. Human bodies execute the reality of good and evil, endowed with free will and the responsibility it brings. Choosing action means personal accountability—claiming God or the Devil made us act negates our free will, a notion dismissed in today’s legal system.

True, we possess physical bodies with needs; thus, spirituality alone cannot suffice. Survival necessitates eating, sometimes killing other animals. While some may view this as primitive or animalistic behavior to overcome, the reality remains. Our spiritual actions derive from a nourished body. Extremes—total spirituality or complete animalistic abandonment—are unsuitable for human beings.

Religious leaders set examples we aspire to emulate. Yet, advocating for the eradication of our animal selves in favor of evolution—through meditation or isolation—is daunting for ordinary individuals. Pursuing absolute silence may benefit individuals but remains inadequate for society. Life offers a symphony score; each note and silence demands a response. Silence at your turn leaves your sheet blank, a void. As humans, we cannot abide; our physical voice gives meaning to the soul’s music. Silence isn’t for you; it isn’t your divine purpose. Speak when notes play; be silent when they rest.

Your voice shapes the spiritual clap, sustaining the world. Reciprocate through practical actions—work, reproduction—ensuring God’s body thrives. Does this contradict prophets? Not at all; they facilitated our transition from savage to social beings. Their task complete, our responsibility now is to advance further, not regress. Our era demands we uphold equal rights, combat climate change, embrace technology, and foster emotional well-being.

Today, we must transcend the politics of identity, overcoming prejudice and discrimination to embrace humanity as a whole. Finding balance between our spiritual and animal sides is a personal journey, requiring wisdom. Remaining silent allows others to control us politically, not spiritually.

Humanity’s struggle lies in extremes; if leaders empathized with ordinary individuals instead of expecting conformity, fewer would feel torn and driven to extremes.

Consider scandals involving pedophilia and priests—attributed to religious extremism—committed by ordinary, conflicted individuals. Blaming external forces masks personal failings and shirks individual responsibility.

Regardless of religious affiliation, we must discern right from wrong. Remarkably, societal norms evolve, turning past wrongs into rights and vice versa. Examples abound—from LGBTQ+ rights to medical advancements like blood transfusions and stem cell research.

Are you committed to universal human rights? If not, clinging to outdated solutions for current issues leads to stagnation. Dwelling in the past risks encountering unpleasant truths. Prejudice and discrimination are ingrained in our history, even within religions despite their spiritual teachings. If you question but still adhere to exclusive religious practices, believing superiority through affiliation, there’s room to evolve. Embrace spiritual basics: treat others as you wish to be treated; empathize rather than prescribe.

If your religious leader insists you can’t reach God without their intercession—be it mullah, priest, or rabbi—they perpetuate prejudice and discrimination, dividing believers and nonbelievers alike. Nationalism and religion founded on prejudice undermine equal human rights.

Any ideology—ism, democracy, or religious doctrine—that treats people unequally is inherently political. In politics, this may be accepted or preached; spiritually, it’s a crime to feel or assert superiority.

We all enter life similarly—birthed without choice into any group, living, eating, falling ill, and dying alike. If your group asserts divine endorsement for their beliefs and actions, yet our human experiences—apart from beliefs—remain universal, question why.

From physicality and spirituality to genetic makeup and inherent identity, all human beings are fundamentally the same. While our attributes—names, genders, colors, places of birth, communities, nations, religions, and education—are emphasized, our shared humanity should prevail.

Birth and death mark our identities; life is the journey in between. Despite education fostering prejudice and discrimination, evolving and questioning remain personal duties.

Your prejudice or discrimination isn’t solely due to politics of belonging; it reflects your choices, shaped by free will and personal justice. Children are excused; adults who yield free will to group politics bear responsibility for their actions and beliefs.

Irrespective of politics or religion, living as a human being is an individual responsibility. Neither purely animal nor purely spiritual, but as a human—evolving, compassionate, forgiving, and inclusive.

Challenge mass influence; balance actions with the two spiritual rules mentioned earlier to manifest true harmony.

Branding God politically.

Are you intoxicated by genuine spirituality, or are you drunk on the politics of group identity? Ask yourself what causes such intoxication that it blurs your spiritual identity. As human beings, we are all blessed with free will and a personal sense of justice for a reason. Determine whether you are harnessing these spiritual gifts or failing to become the entity you were meant to be.

As an evolved individual of this era, you owe it to yourself to understand what drives this intoxication and why. Is it truly rooted in spirituality, or is it driven by your political affiliations and group identity, causing you to lose control?

(EVOLVE FOR GOODNESS’ SAKE.)

Regardless of its brand, all forms of alcohol are inherently intoxicating. To me, those that are spiritually pure, whether intoxicating or not, are connected to God and humanity. However, when mixed with politics and the sense of belonging to our groups—the tainted realities of our governance and belief systems—it becomes a volatile and deadly mix for humanity. This sense of belonging can not only be toxic for individuals but has also been proven to destroy free will, personal justice, promote prejudice, spread discriminatory behaviors, and rob peace. It can lead individuals and groups to lose the very essence of spiritual humanity or what defines a human as a spiritual entity.

Just as real alcohol diminishes our inhibitions, extreme religious or political affiliations can strip individuals of their spirituality. Our inhibitions are what distinguish us as spiritually aware human beings from mere animals. The question arises: should we moderate or altogether abstain from such intoxications? Considering the vast number of people who drink without losing control, it’s evident that most of us are moderate in our consumption. However, there remains a segment of individuals who go beyond moderation. Though their numbers may be small, some individuals become extremists when intoxicated by their political or group affiliations. Whether it’s alcohol or any other influence that drives you to behave violently, act poorly, or become an extremist or addict, it is your personal responsibility to either avoid it altogether or consume it responsibly.

If you wish to believe in God and enjoy a social drink for spiritual reasons, then do so, as it has the potential to help you become a better person. Seek the godly aspects of spirituality. If you exclusively prefer a particular brand of drink, understand your reasons behind this choice. If it’s solely due to your group affiliation, it’s not a sufficient reason given your possession of free will. If your group dictates this choice, ensure you do not forfeit your free will and personal sense of justice. Losing the core essence of being a human, including the individual ability to believe in God, indicates spiritual intoxication where you cannot handle the ‘alcohol’ due to loyalty to political group affiliations.

True spirituality has aided and will continue to aid individuals in transcending barriers of race, gender, color, nationality, and religion in the pursuit of justice. Religions exemplify this diversity, where people of all backgrounds share common beliefs due to spirituality. Similarly, nations exist where one can belong irrespective of gender, color, race, or belief systems.

Spirituality is both universal and individual simultaneously. Since the intoxication of God is linked to real spirituality, it cannot be confined exclusively to political groups or any specific nation or religion—essentially, no ‘brand.’ In contrast, political affiliations are brand-related and cannot transcend imposed boundaries of group politics. Political agendas are prominently found in nationalism, religions, and their sects. You can only recognize this if you become the CEO of your own life, utilizing free will and personal justice. This can only occur by overcoming political group affiliations and viewing humanity as a singular entity.

What drives our deep passion for religions and nationalism? It’s the politics of belonging. Some of us lack independent thought as human beings, making us susceptible to losing control under intoxication. Interestingly, our belonging groups openly encourage this behavior, whether national, racial, or religious—this is the root cause of our prejudices and discrimination against one another.

When individual passion spirals out of control, it’s the individual who commits spiritual crimes like mob violence. Therefore, the individual bears responsibility first. Punishing the collective for the wrongs of the individual is spiritually incorrect and can harm many innocents. This is why I believe religious wars are not spiritual; they are, and have always been, political.

If you view God as akin to alcohol, you understand that all forms of alcohol cause intoxication. Our political religions have long recognized this connection to individual weakness. Therefore, many of our group policies cater to exploiting these weaknesses for political gain. Just as catnip drives cats wild, intoxication from any form of ‘Godly’ alcohol can drive humans to extremes, even to the point of killing each other over ‘brand names.’

Religions ostensibly preach spiritual intoxication to make us compassionate and emotionally evolved beings. Sadly, we often become savage killers, even within our own groups and against our own kind.

I call it the folly of group politics. The politics of belonging often supersedes our spiritual fulfillment and robs us of compassion. Initially sought for spiritual fulfillment, religions are often co-opted by the politics of belonging, selling us a branded ‘Godly’ alcohol at a high cost—especially when we resort to killing and dying for our groups’ sake, committing spiritual crimes in their name.

If you seek a spiritual high, it resides within you. This is why I refer to myself as a dancing bottle. Allow me to quote a fragment of a poem I read in Urdu during my youth, as I remember it and then translate:

“I quote, ‘If intoxication resided in alcohol, then the bottle would dance. It is my prerogative that I become intoxicated and dance.'”

As mentioned earlier, it always comes down to individual and personal responsibility. Unless coerced by fear of reprisal from belonging groups, we should all seek spiritual intoxication to become compassionate and evolved human beings.

Fear, greed, and the desire for control are three main components of a political entity. Conversely, spirituality liberates you from these influences. Despite what they claim, if passionate, politically charged religious leaders suppress freedom of speech, they automatically become purely political. Questioning is healthy and should be permitted, answered respectfully even if it challenges authority. Otherwise, it becomes an authoritarian form of governance. The old styles of authoritative rule, such as kingdoms and strict religious hierarchies, have largely faded in today’s drastically changed landscape.

In this era, there is a universal thirst for equal human rights and freedom of choice. Our innate evolutionary nature makes it challenging for authorities to suppress even the average individual.

Those who resist new forms of governance will inevitably find themselves marginalized or silenced. Some time ago, I wrote a blog titled “God’s House for Sale for One Dollar.” When church buildings are sold for a token amount, it signals a perspective shift toward authoritarian religious extremism.

While Brexit and Trump dominate current headlines, they may represent a final stand for prejudiced, discriminatory politics. Convulsions in humanity do not imply its demise; sometimes adversity prompts us to seek solutions. The surge in demand for universal human rights across societies suggests we are embracing globalization.

Our sense of belonging to groups is being challenged globally, yet resistance is inevitable. This upheaval is the change I’m referring to—there’s a shift in the air. Ordinary individuals are growing weary of political conflicts and wars.

Evidence lies in the mass migration of refugees abandoning their homelands—some for economic reasons, others due to environmental factors, but most seek peace. It’s a time for individuals, and collectively as humanity, to recognize these challenges. As individuals, we evolve independently of our immediate families or groups. As we mature, we should—and must—begin to think independently, whether about political, religious, or nationalistic affiliations.

Right or wrong isn’t always the metric; it’s the path we choose and where it leads us. Having faith in God is more significant than adhering strictly to religious rules, traditions, and customs. This belief can imbue mortal life with happiness and contentment. Otherwise, we may scapegoat others, including ourselves and God, denying ourselves happiness and contentment—life’s most precious treasures.

(Returning to the matter at hand.)

As CEOs of our lives, we bear responsibility for managing our mortal existence with a short-term perspective. We cannot afford to ignore life’s big or small issues, nor should we leave them unresolved. If we focus solely on the future, we neglect the present and its immediate needs; dwelling on the past glorifies outdated governance.

Our lives should be lived like reading a book—one page at a time. If you dwell on the last chapter or anticipate the next, you miss the page you’re currently on. Persisting in this manner means finishing the book without truly reading it. Life is a temporary gift, bestowed with free will to shape it as we choose. Select a cause and dedicate yourself, ensuring no regrets in life’s final chapters.

Constant worry about impending doom or fixation on the afterlife diverts focus from personal powers and responsibilities. If indoctrinated to prioritize the afterlife, take charge as CEO of your life to align present and personal meanings.

If you fail to recognize politics reducing you to a worker bee or warrior ant, it’s time to rise and reclaim your individuality. Only you, by utilizing free will and personal justice, can rectify being victimized by group politics.

Remember, free will isn’t a gift from your group—it’s directly bestowed by God to the individual. Likewise, consider your personal sense of justice, innate upon taking physical form, guiding behavior: treat others as you wish to be treated. Simplify without belief systems; recognizing God within others fosters inner and outer peace.

Whether prayer practices, traditions, customs, or anything else, politics of belonging influence them. Adopting a mortal perspective ensures standing firm, metaphorically, on your own two feet. Else, group politics can reduce you to a worker bee or warrior ant with little resistance.

Questioning or asserting independence may be met with accusations of losing one’s way or that only religion offers a path to God. If tainted by politics of belonging, a religion becomes a political entity, not a spiritual path or direct route to God.

Ultimately, spirituality’s essence connects you to God, irrespective of religion. As CEOs of our lives, we should prioritize spirituality over group politics because our lives are not just for God or our group’s sake but for our individual sake as well.

Failure to read your life’s book page by page means neglecting your purpose. Intentional living on the present page is essential; as a CEO, manage all facets of life.

Accepting individual losses doesn’t make you a competent CEO; prioritizing what matters does. Identifying priorities is the key to unlocking Pandora’s box. Distinguish yourself from instinctive animals; embrace your significance. Free from group politics, you manage your mortal life as CEO.

If indoctrinated as a born sinner, worthless unless obedient—and damned otherwise—use your CEO insight to unlock Pandora’s box.

Pandora’s box reflects a carrot-and-stick philosophy, diminishing individual humanity. Unlike training pets, humans self-regulate without greed or fear. Understanding this power positions you to manage God’s affairs one person at a time, turning spiritual aspirations into physical actions. Attend places of worship meaningfully, beyond rituals, by meeting others’ needs, a higher spiritual pursuit than mere ritualism. God has no needs, only people do—hence serving them embodies godliness. Churches, mosques, or temples matter less than people’s needs.

Where did you learn that you are an insignificant being, and that God Almighty and the Devil are the ones running the show? Spirituality should demonstrate that their actions cannot manifest without your participation. Every good and bad action requires human physicality, and you bear personal responsibility for your contributions, guided by free will. Human beings are far superior than they are often taught; even angels cannot match this status. Angels, like God and the Devil, depend on human individuals to enact or create reality.

Identifying solely with your group makes you susceptible to political influences. As a CEO of your life, you cannot merely be a vessel of your group; you are a vessel of God, endowed with free will and personal justice. Group affiliations’ politics can lead to spiritual transgressions, reducing you to a vessel of the Devil.

Recognizing your accountability, understand that free will allows you to choose between Godly and Devilish acts. Your personal sense of justice aids in living comfortably in your mortal skin.

Choose to be a vessel of God by personal choice, not just for the afterlife but for your earthly years as well. With personal justice, your greatest critic resides within. Living with constant inner conflict robs you of life’s most precious treasures: happiness and contentment.

If a religion teaches that life on earth is inferior to the afterlife, scrutinize its intentions logically. While offering hope in adversity isn’t wrong, demanding you sacrifice everything, including your life, for the afterlife warrants careful examination. Likely, this philosophy serves the politics of belonging more than spirituality or God.

Logically speaking, God requires living people to convert spirituality into action. Once deceased, you can no longer fulfill this role; thus, all responsibilities rest upon the living—upon your shoulders, your back, your hands, and your functioning body. Ask yourself: is life after death truly more critical? It’s your individual decision, but first, become a CEO, lest politically astute groups exploit you in the guise of God’s will.

Reading the page in front, one day at a time, keeps you focused on living your life. Otherwise, thoughts of the afterlife can prevent you from reading your life’s book, reducing you to political manipulation akin to ants and bees.

This is the politics I refer to: your life is a gift directly from the source, or God. If you’re not actively living it, you likely follow what your group dictates. If you’re shouldering the load and sacrificing, who benefits? Follow the money—literally, follow the power—and you’ll find it doesn’t lead to God. Instead, politically savvy, powerful humans manipulate you. Should you allow it?

Even those who benefit die; thus, they employ group politics to divide humanity. In dividing, they commit spiritual crimes against all competitors, including you. Refuse to be complicit; God may ask, “I gave you free will and personal justice—how did you use them?”

Claiming exclusive rights for God, they sow hatred and war, gladly using you in sacrifice. To me, all religious wars are political—no ifs, ands, or buts—because why kill a living, breathing human in God’s name? If God converts spirituality into action through humans, it’d be a loss for God, counter to spirituality.

Educated or CEOs of our lives, we can transcend divisions to become one humanity. Until then, those who benefit from division will preach it, stoking prejudice, discrimination, and hatred.

CEOs can spot nationalist and religious politics easily, but emotional attachment blinds most to question or evolve.

If you perceive and understand, share it—help others see the politics behind religious rhetoric and the guise of God.

To evolve faster, rid ourselves of those uninterested in human deaths due to political conflict. Look at history: no tally can quantify innocent deaths due to our politics of division. If you seek a logical explanation, consider the brand name of God.

Clothing covers the body; a brand name relates to business. Intoxication is present in all alcohol brands, yet we choose our birthed group’s brand, which relates to business, not reality. Spirituality is reality—the essence of God we all seek. Political religions are business, selling spirituality’s tainted brand, and the politics of belonging capitalize on this. We buy into it because of birth, defending, fighting, killing, and dying for it—all rooted in politics. Why? It’s a personal question, one we should privately ponder for personal answers. Until we can collectively distinguish politics from spirituality, our evolution stalls; group affiliation dictates, leaving us like bees and ants.

Each religion garners followers desiring spiritual fulfillment but often drunk on the politics of belonging, sold a tainted brand.

Hiding personal insecurities, we overpay for a brand name, even if the product is the same. Advertising sells products—nationalism and religions included. Political leaders and religious scholars fervently market prejudice, discrimination, and fear, lying to promote their brand.

For instance, they claim non-believers face damnation, while followers attain heaven. Why condemn others for their beliefs? All religious wars stem from politics—no ifs, ands, or buts—because killing in God’s name contradicts spiritual action.

When we’re all knowledgeable or CEOs, we’ll cross these divisive lines, uniting as one humanity. Until then, those benefiting from division will preach it, using human individuals to perpetuate prejudice, discrimination, and hate.

This is where you fail to acknowledge the good deeds of individuals who belong to opposing groups. Their only fault lies in being born into a different group, making them entirely innocent of any wrongdoing. This concept of “born sinners” can be twisted or manipulated for political control, which is fundamentally wrong. Spirituality has no association with this; it’s all about exerting power over individuals.

From insulin to various technologies and advancements, non-believers’ contributions are openly and shamelessly utilized by religious extremists worldwide. Yet, these same individuals denigrate non-believers, despite owing their lives to these inventions.

Spiritually aware individuals recognize that injustice is often tied to the politics of belonging. Spiritually, we must give credit where it is due.

All human progress owes itself to liberal thinkers who dared to think outside the box. Without them, we might still be in caves, fighting for survival against the elements. Comparing our intelligence to that of other creatures underscores our superiority. Delving deeper, the reasons become clear. The ability to question—’why?’—sets humans apart. Why have we evolved so remarkably? The answers lie in nature’s design.

If we stray from our natural inclinations, we impede further evolution. Power politics and fear-mongering proponents have historically hindered progress and evolution in all forms.

From advocating equal human rights to advancements like blood transfusions, stem cells, and cloning, these detractors oppose technological and even spiritual advancements such as universal healthcare and gender justice.

From archaic practices like sati and prejudice against widows to modern struggles for equal human rights, the perpetrators, ironically, often claim religious affiliation. It begs the question: why would those who profess godliness oppose universal healthcare for all? Anyone opposing social programs must be driven by politics, not spirituality, which has always centered around aiding the needy.

Spirituality and God transcend global political boundaries; they do not require religious branding for individuals to feel spiritually uplifted and perform godly deeds. Even atheists can experience spirituality. God does not need a branded name for spiritual enlightenment; personal spirituality resides in the same realm.

We all can embrace spirituality, whether religious or not. God is akin to an intoxication bestowed exclusively by God, and as individuals, we seek that high to become good, helpful people. Even if God is perceived as imaginary by some, I personally attribute to God or the source for all that exists and for defining the essence of a human being.

Acknowledging and crediting due respect is not widespread among humans, largely due to politics. Once we transcend these limitations individually, we’ll recognize our dependencies and limitations in our individual functioning.

Numerous factual elements underscore our interdependence. Oxygen sustains us, the vastness of space is beyond our control, and within ourselves, with trillions of cells and bacteria, our existence is far from simple, contrary to what we’re taught. If you still believe you control everything, consider the complexities of life. Remember to be fair to yourself; mortality awaits.

Not believing in God suggests things happen randomly or by chance or placebo. Even if you’re a scientist who acknowledges the placebo effect, there’s much you don’t know about its workings. While I don’t claim omniscience, I don’t exclusively rely on God or science. Science deals with repeatable facts, but there’s much more to discover. Until then, making assumptions about God is premature. Even the term ‘God’ is a human construct, limiting our understanding until we learn more. How can we wage wars over the existence of God when we don’t fully comprehend ourselves? Human ego, pride, and honor often drive such claims, tainted by our sense of belonging and its politics. These traits frequently lead to conflict, impeding our spiritual growth as modern individuals.

Considering random chance, one might attribute differences in nose size or body frame to it, even among siblings. Our intricacies defy randomness. Even examining worms scientifically challenges our perceptions. Is this diversity merely chance? Reflect on why and how we exist in our current life form, which continues to evolve.

Does evolution simply strive for improvement, or are we designed to fulfill our potential? Intriguingly, our potential evolves alongside us. What are we, and where are we headed in this pursuit?

Our brains exemplify this ongoing evolution, continually absorbing new information. Where does—or will—it end? It concludes only for the individual due to mortality, but we pass our acquired knowledge to subsequent generations, perpetuating human evolution. Given our evolving potential, can you definitively conclude on God’s existence? As individuals, we’re like structures under construction, never fully completed. Therefore, claiming to know everything, especially knowing we’re finite, demands a change in priorities. As mortals, we function as CEOs, pursuing happiness and contentment while acknowledging our animalistic sides. Hope and optimism are pivotal in collecting happiness and contentment; thus, believing in God facilitates a fulfilling mortal life. Often, our nature encourages us to forgo immediate pleasures for an afterlife. Ironically, God requires human assistance while we’re alive. Extreme choices stem from free will, a divine gift. Therefore, why should religious individuals demand sacrifices for an uncertain afterlife? Such demands are inherently political.

Equally detrimental is disbelief, embracing random chance or placebo as explanations. Your beliefs are personal. However, attempting to impose them universally is futile, as history demonstrates. Humanity perpetually evolves, whether or not you approve. Always remember your mortal limitations. In this day and age, ignorance, prejudice, and discrimination must be overcome.

Extremes signify a lack of spirituality. Remember, treat others as you wish to be treated, and place yourself in their shoes rather than forcing them into yours.

Religious labels have muddled issues, perpetuating historical injustices and current conflicts. Nationalists and religious extremists scratch old wounds, preventing healing for centuries.

If we abandon narrow perspectives and address territorial disputes straightforwardly, compromises can resolve them. However, adding a religious twist incites conflict. Continuous strife in the name of religion is political, not spiritual. Prolonged conflicts underscore prejudiced, discriminatory loyalties. Support for endless, senseless killings betrays human compassion, guided by political agendas rather than godly principles.

While passionate about injustice, especially regarding God’s branding for political gain, I reject the politics of belonging. I find myself challenging or transcending these boundaries, embracing spirituality as it’s universally present in past and present societies. Spirituality transcends borders, genders, races, and religions; it’s universal and beyond branding.

Spirituality advocates individual responsibility, moderation, and equal human rights, opposing prejudice, discrimination, and extremism. I advocate this because spirituality aligns with the mortal nature of every human individual. Understanding our problems’ root causes is each individual’s responsibility.

As I’ve mentioned before, “Dancing Bottle” is my name, and it stems from my belief that we all carry a bit of God within us, possessing an intoxicating element. This is our spiritual alcohol that can intoxicate and drive us mad, so we must each become CEOs who use it as a social drink while maintaining control. Since this “alcohol” can turn us into fanatics and drunks, we must engage our spiritual side to balance our animal instincts; otherwise, we will perpetually witness enduring religious wars fueled by intoxication.

Whether we become good or bad individuals hinges on this, making it imperative for all of us to become CEOs to grasp the significance of our free will and personal sense of justice. The potential for both good and bad has always existed, exists now, and will continue to exist for us to choose.

Alcohol, produced from various sources like fruits, vegetables, and grains, bears numerous brand names, each with its flaws or merits but unified by one main characteristic: intoxication.

To me, the pursuit of that high or intoxication should be accessible through all brands, serving the same purpose. Just as with clothing, which fulfills the need to cover the body but varies in style and maker, resulting in differing prices. Metaphorically, clothing, alcohol, or belief systems should all cater to human physical or spiritual needs. But why do humans persist in believing their brand is superior? It might be acceptable if everyone lived in peace, but that’s not the case. Thus, we must critically examine human behavior to identify the causes or catalysts for our problems.

Some adhere to one God, others to multiple deities, while some visit the tombs of deceased saints, and others do not. All hope to find God through diverse religious practices, though some believe in no God at all. Our conflicts arise when we argue over who is right, with politics of belonging sneaking in to intoxicate us with an alcohol devoid of spirituality.

We engage in battles over right and wrong to the extent of killing and dying over it. What drives us to such extremes? Is it an abuse of divine alcohol? Why can some manage a social drink while others cannot resist? Whether scrutinizing the positive, negative, or ugly aspects of belief systems or maintaining neutrality, we require greater comprehension of their potential benefits and harms.

To me, spirituality and our justice systems should be universal and untainted. Regardless of the kind of politics—whether related to religious group affiliations or governance—these systems should not interfere with spirituality and justice.

While American Supreme Court justices are appointed through political means, the justice system should ideally remain free from political influence. Should a nation lean liberal, its justice system should evolve accordingly; failure to do so not only disrupts governance but also fosters distrust in the justice system. A nation striving for justice through a political lens will find eradicating prejudice and discrimination impossible. Today, equality in human rights belongs to all, leaving conservative political factions in a quandary.

A politicized justice system deviates from justice, much like a religion veering from spirituality becomes political, benefiting some and disadvantaging others through politics. Always remember, a justice system and spirituality cannot be biased; justice for some and injustice for others is neither spiritually right nor just.

If performing rituals at Mecca, kissing, or touching the Black Stone is meaningful to you, then do so without harming others who worship the same God under a different name. If your spiritual growth depends on believing in God, you cannot afford to be extremist, prejudiced, or discriminatory to the extent that you cannot recognize God in others. Believers and non-believers alike are cells in God’s body, with a singular purpose: to facilitate the spiritual embodiment of humanity’s flourishing and evolution.

If you choose to wage war against others, ask yourself why. The answer always lies in drinking politically-tainted divine alcohol supplied by your affiliations.

As a spiritually aware CEO, you recognize that politics, or the alcohol of belonging, intoxicates you to the point where you commit spiritual crimes while claiming to serve God. Politics masks human emotions, so behaving like an animal, whether out of ignorance, disregard, or pride, has no connection to God or spirituality.

If you wish to serve God, serve humanity, for God lacks personal needs like human individuals. This task is easier said than done when you are equally torn at your core: a spiritual entity grappling with the needs of an animal body. Choosing between the two is not straightforward, explaining why we cannot envision a time free from crime or war, let alone a crime-free society or world. Ask yourself: do your emotions overpower your spiritual side? If so, strive for spiritual growth to avoid committing spiritual crimes while hiding behind God. This is not merely political, prejudiced, discriminatory, or ignorant; it is also a guilt-inducing, spiritually bankrupt crime against God.

No one is, or should be, above the laws of nations and universal spirituality. The most openly committed spiritual crimes involve prejudice and discrimination against innocent individuals, often justified in the name of nationalism, religion, or even God.

If you believe in God, where do you place God in your life, and what powers do you attribute to God? If you believe God is almighty, granting life and death, then logically, you should refrain from taking matters into your own hands and harming innocent beings. I do not subscribe to the notion of a God with human animal traits. God represents our spiritual side, and as spiritually aware beings, we cannot—and I emphasize cannot—take the life of an innocent person in God’s name. Such actions require a state of inebriation.

In today’s era of equal human rights, the internet, and global warming, rapid change is inevitable. Failure to keep pace with these changes will harm humanity. If individuals fear physical harm from their affiliations due to their thoughts, those communities do not deserve their contributions. Such individuals should seek appreciation and respect elsewhere.

A belief system that penalizes individuals for their thoughts is on borrowed time, for this era champions equal human rights. Although the path may be fraught with challenges, our history demonstrates that we must fight for our freedoms—whether from land occupation or extremist ideologies. The struggles remain the same. Sadly, humanity established the tradition long ago that one must fight for what one desires, whether it involves awareness of equal human rights or addressing global warming.

Interestingly, it is consistently the conservative segment of society known for resisting change. They may not believe that change originates from God, perhaps viewing change advocates as adherents of the Devil’s path. They lack sufficient trust in God to embrace change or simply fear losing political power. Indeed, that is precisely what they stand to lose, hence their fierce resistance. Trusting in God involves accepting that changes align with God’s will. Some believe in, or hide behind, religious texts to commit spiritual crimes, albeit with a political twist. Spiritual crimes in the name of God may find acceptance among some, but I advocate for a direct and spiritual approach.

Whether conservative, liberal, of the same faith, of opposing faith, or atheist, grant yourself a spiritual respite. Whether you believe in God or not, believe in humanitarianism to serve all of humanity. Consider our history and current events; our extreme belief systems have never liberated us from violence. We must transition to a new paradigm to overcome our political systems steeped in prejudice and discrimination.

From a spiritual standpoint, our days on this earth are numbered; hence, we possess limited capacity for consumption. Even with unlimited resources, individual limitations should humble us. Irrespective of our affiliations, we are conditioned to hoard and worry, believing we must secure our future. Though our future remains uncertain, a spiritual perspective reveals mortality and traces of insecurity throughout human history. Consider ancient Egypt, where individuals brought material possessions into their graves. Traditions and customs instill loyalty to political affiliations, discouraging broad-based thinking. Reflect on humanity as a whole, and watch traditional establishments lose their brand-based influence. Our affiliations feed us perpetual falsehoods and denials, and we, as individuals, fall victim to these falsehoods. Can we liberate ourselves? Indeed, but it demands each of us to assume responsibility and assert control over our actions, necessitating that we all become CEOs of our lives to prevent political exploitation.

This task is daunting, given that we have been conditioned to perceive ourselves as weak and vulnerable. Such conditioning prevents us from thinking or believing independently, for we place greater faith in politically-influenced religious teachings, perpetuating our insecurities without our affiliations. Individual vulnerability benefits affiliations, which thrive on knowledge to keep individuals ignorant, employing politically-tainted religions.

Our actions directly contradict God’s spiritual nature, as we resort to killing one another, despite our individual connection to God. Can anyone claim to have prayers answered without the involvement of another human being? Such occurrences are miracles. In daily life, God speaks through human thoughts, allowing them to manifest physically. Evolve, for the sake of God, and acknowledge your individual potential and significance within the broader context of life. Learn to coexist.

Evidence of this potential is readily apparent in modern societies. Despite the differences in religion, nationality, race, and skin color, nations comprise diverse populations. It is universally acknowledged that humanity embraces diversity and coexists harmoniously.

Wars reveal the strength of our group identities, rivaling our familial bonds. This represents a shared challenge: the powerful sense of belonging versus our individual sense of justice and freedom of choice. Standing firm is no easy task, but I uphold personal and universal truths. Ultimately, we must live with the injustice inflicted upon others in the name of political affiliation. Consult war veterans to understand the difficulty of denying one’s own spiritual beliefs.

Drunken cells, cell talk (Part 2)

If you are willing to kill another living, breathing human being just because they look, believe, and think differently than you, you need to start questioning yourself about the causes of your passionate beliefs and ways of thinking. Ideally, conflicting or even non-conflicting but different groups of people should be looked at with unbiased, non-prejudicial, and non-discriminatory ways because of spiritual respect for each other.

The first reality is that belonging to another, opposing, or even your own groups means being human, including yourself. Each human being individually should have a clear vision of personal strength to see the politics of belonging behind our actions.

If you passionately hate others and are willing to engage in extreme behavior just because your group says so, you need to understand your own strength as an individual. Your ability to use free will and possess a personal sense of justice should help you carry out your personal responsibilities in mortal life. Why do you have free will and a personal sense of justice? If these came with you from before birth, it means they are meant by God. So, ask yourself, why are you still passionate enough to kill over your belief systems? If you don’t care, refuse to take personal responsibility, and are willing to blindly follow the politics of your group, you are essentially intoxicated by the politics of belonging and are unable to be what you have been created as. If you ignore your status as a human being and become a warrior ant or worker bee, you are not the CEO of your own life.

This intoxicated behavior is like alcohol, even if it is the alcohol of God. With free will and a sense of justice, you should know that you should drink it socially because being drunk means you would, or at least are willing to, commit spiritual crimes. Anything related to God is spiritual and compassionate. If your actions are related to the political agenda of your group, before you act passionately for politics, remember your spiritual compassion.

Always remember, no matter how you look at it, if your group uses God politically, it is spiritually wrong. If you believe that you follow God according to your politically tainted religion, you are responsible for finding your personal and spiritual path.

If you are drunk with the politics of belonging, which would diminish your strength to have a social drink and lead you to commit spiritual crimes without needing to be persuaded, your religions are making you stuck on the brand name, not the real essence. The true essence of being religious is that you seek spiritual awareness, yet you lose your way halfway because your judgment has been tainted by whatever politics your religion advocates.

Metaphorically, all human beings, while alive, are bottles of God’s alcohol. Whether you believe in God or not, you are labeled and take pride in that label. If you understand individually and spiritually that this label is all about the politics of belonging, you could take pride in being a religious fanatic or even an atheist.

The real essence inside you makes you the vessel of God, but you are so convinced that you are just part of the group you belong to that you have no particular value as an individual. Now, let’s examine the anatomy of a group: it’s a collection of individuals, meaning that anything done by the group is done by the individual or individuals. So, even in a group setting, an individual is the foundation of the group.

Who is responsible, and how did the individual become so insignificant? It can’t be solely the group, because an individual has free will, so they must be a willing partner. An individual who willingly collaborates is so important to a group that a group can’t exist, and even God can’t function without them. So why does an individual feel so insignificant and worthless? Keep asking yourself until you find an answer that helps you understand your value, because nothing happens without you. This should be enough to give you a self-respecting, self-esteem-boosting, CEO-making answer.

If you are told that you belong to the body and nothing more, your personal understanding is limited because of the politics of your group. Lack of understanding is like the bacteria in your gut; if you don’t understand with your half-knowledge, you are going to destroy it, only to find that bad bacteria help you live healthily and without it, your immune system is compromised.

If your understanding is that you are helping God by following the politics of your group, you must try to understand the whole picture before you take personal actions. It’s like I said before: killing bacteria without knowing their benefits to the body. Our knowledge only evolves when we explore and pursue; if any knowledge discourages exploration, it opposes evolution, and anything against evolution opposes God’s will, or metaphorically speaking, our body.

As human beings, we have earned the right to live and survive on this earth because we have evolved to adapt; otherwise, we would have been wiped out by infections.

Whether religions or not, we have survived through exploration and the will to survive. The simple truth is that our exploratory nature to evolve is directly connected to God and meant by God. That’s why religions could not stop humans from evolving, despite their strict rules, severe punishments, and threats of excommunication.

If you disagree with me, that’s fine, but I don’t see religions and our constitutions as the ultimate human knowledge. I personally leave room for evolution because I believe it is sacred and spiritual. Certain things we bring along from before birth, so they are spiritually connected to each of us individually.

Whatever story you believe is good for you, but believing that you are somehow better than others automatically contradicts spirituality, because spirituality has no politics. All human cells work for the body and are useful only when the body is functioning and alive. You are a part of the body, and being a part of a body is still a story of a part, not the whole story.

If your group preaches that you are the best and closest to God, it fundamentally makes you prejudiced and discriminatory, even against your own family members who don’t think like you.

First of all, you don’t understand how the whole body works, and second, you don’t truly believe in God because you believe only in what your group tells you. Judging others based on the knowledge taught by your group is a biased opinion and is tainted with politics.

Religions and nationalism provide false self-esteem to individuals, which helps to some extent. Even a gang member has better self-esteem than a lonely individual who doesn’t feel connected to anyone or anything.

Awareness of God grew stronger with religions, but since they exclusively emphasized belonging to a community, just like nationalism, they were good for some people but not for others. That made them, and they still are, preachers of prejudice and discrimination. In God’s spiritual world, there is no prejudice and discrimination; it’s all about humanity as a whole, just as spirituality or cell connection is to the entire body—it’s not for some; it’s for all.

A belief system has the power to help an individual, even if it’s imaginary. It has powers like the placebo effect. Deeply held beliefs have helped human individuals become better than mere savage creatures. Compassion, forgiveness, sacrifice, and love are proof of our evolution.

We have been evolving for a long time, but it has taken a toll on the individual’s belief system. Religions used God as a political tool to control individuals’ thinking, sometimes even by force. From mob killings to passionately shunning their own kind or even killing family members, these are clear examples of religious extremism.

Trust, hope, sacrifice, giving, and love go hand in hand with belief systems, and the opposite flourishes with disconnection. Unless an individual develops a deep and personal connection to God, they don’t need to belong to a group to feel safe.

Passing human knowledge to future generations is important, but locking them into it as the ultimate knowledge is absurd. Our religions and constitutions are designed to do just that, and followers neglect to consider human beings’ evolving nature.

It may have been great for one era, but we change all the time, so what worked in the past may not work today. Religions and constitutions need to have room for changes and amendments; otherwise, they can harm rather than benefit humanity.

From state disputes within a nation to religious sects and divisions, to wars between different religions, all stem from the evolving demands of daily and individual life. Religions and constitutions can give us manifestos, but they should all be subject to change with evolution. If they are not, it’s human nature to break the rules; that means anything restricting humanity is against human beings’ evolving nature and will always fail. Our evolution is a clear sign of our ever-evolving nature.

Our politics of belonging and our evolutionary nature have brought us to a point where, by choice, we can create a day of reckoning that is foreseen religiously. A nuclear war, even if localized, can bring about a day of reckoning-like destruction.

Personally, I believe religious belief should not be more than a spiritual path; when mixed with the politics of belonging, it not only loses its spirituality but also takes individuals to extreme views. We remove compassion from our personal abilities and become passionate extremists just to work against compassion. It’s talked about a lot but not practiced by present-day religious individuals tainted by politics.

Unfortunately, for passionate individuals, it’s hard to separate our spiritual belief systems from the politics of belonging. Even educated individuals struggle to fight against the politics of belonging.

In today’s world, if an individual asks a personal question to a mullah or a priest, they often look to the past for answers. Humanity has been referring to the past for present problems, but in this era, the way things are going, it would be more problematic if we don’t keep up with the times.

Interestingly, humanity is changing so rapidly today that we can’t keep up with these changes, but we must be able to use our beliefs to help us adapt. By holding on to our traditions and faith, it helps us as humanity; otherwise, it doesn’t matter to a few extremists.

If you think you somehow become better than others just by belonging to race, gender, nation, religion, or even by attaining an educated degree, it is related to false and non-spiritual education. Spirituality teaches us to be humble and not to think of ourselves as better than others because, in reality, we are all cells of God’s body. Working for it, we all have certain tasks and are useful to the body, so claiming that you are better can deny the reality of mortality. We all have the same destination and job to reciprocate in return for our living years.

Interestingly, our races, religions, and nationalisms all preach that you are better than others just by being part of that group. What our future holds for us with all this divisive preaching of prejudice and discrimination can be fearsome. Our obsession with advanced weaponry is an alarming trend that points towards self-destruction in the name of religions and nationalism.

Our authorities have been, are, and will always work against individual strength because of their political control and governance. If you personally buy into that, you start to look at yourself as weak and vulnerable, someone who doesn’t have a say.

With free will, a personal sense of justice, and ingrained spirituality, a human individual is equipped with a choice. Our groups only succeed by making us think poorly of ourselves as weak and inferior. If you become the entity you were created as, you will become a free and independent decision-maker and the CEO of your life. Only then will you be able to see your direct connection to the source and the politics of your belonging groups.

Remember, if even God’s physicality depends on the human individual’s physicality, how important you actually are in the larger scheme of life. This spiritual and physical connection should automatically make killing each other wrong. Regardless of which side you are on, it is a net loss for God. Even if it is one functioning cell at a time or its insignificance, it is still a loss. Definitely, it can’t be spiritual; it is political, even if your religion or nation says it is done in the name of God. They are using God as a political tool, and God can’t defend God, so it has to be the aware individuals.

We should all move beyond the sense of belonging related to politics and learn to own our personal actions because we are blessed with free will and a personal sense of justice from before birth. Everything we do as adults, we have a say in, so it is our responsibility.

If you want peace in society and to eliminate all criminals, come out and say so in the name of justice and control. If you want revenge for your lost love or want your territory back from invaders, come out and say you are doing it for political purposes; don’t use God’s name to kill cells of God. It not only looks bad politically but is also spiritually beneath human intellect.

Recognize what and who you are. You may look like a human being with one head, two arms, two legs, two eyes, two ears on the outside, but in reality, you are much more than just a physical body. First of all, no matter how you see yourself, scientifically, genetically, and spiritually, you are a human being. Your color, gender, nation, or belief system does not describe you spiritually. Spiritually, you carry the same entity within you, are made of carbon scientifically, and are an exact genetic match regardless of all the differences. Our identities of being different from each other are all related to our politically indoctrinated knowledge. Certainly, we need politics and a sense of belonging, but using God’s name to kill each other is absurd and beneath a spiritual being who lives within each one of us.

When religions became infected with politics, it tarnished the name of God. I would like people to become spiritually aware, one individual at a time, so our mass changes collectively from the bottom up.

What God is and how God functions can have vastly different and conflicting answers, but spirituality can teach us where a human individual stands in this grand scheme of life. In turn, that can help us learn to belong to humanity as a whole, just as a cell belongs to a whole body, regardless of its specific part.

Since God is our catnip or alcohol, we are all bottles of God. Unfortunately, we have our brand names for God to fit into our pigeonholes and make God a human-like figure: powerful, almighty, but human-like, favoring some and hurting others. Personally, I disagree with that because if God is a spiritual entity, God can’t be biased, non-spiritual, or political. Always remember, a seed does not resemble the plant, so we may be mistaken about the whole thing. I am not here to argue about who is right; my passion is to help every living human being emerge from their pigeonhole and learn to use God-given free will to stop this nonsense of killing each other over our differences, yet in the name of God.

Unfortunately, the phenomenon of a sense of belonging is much more powerful for a human individual. They feel inferior and insecure because mortality is not understood and is therefore feared. So, worshiping God is compartmentalized, yet it is basic and fundamental as reciprocation. Since God does not need any help, and certainly not your obedience (because if that were the case, we would be like other creatures), God needs us to help physically to make spirituality meaningful. Since we are all God’s cells, turning spirituality into physical reality requires helping the individuals around you; that is the real worshiping of God. Nurturing God’s cells is real worship, or prayer; everything else is traditional and ritualistic practices that all religious groups promote to bring people together, so it is still related to politics, not real spirituality.

A lack of belief in belonging directly to God Almighty makes people attach themselves to belonging groups as if they are the whole thing. Logically, it makes them not believe in God. Remember, as I said, if two cells in the arm or leg are talking, does the body exist or not? A group may seem real, but it is just part of the body, not the whole body. Relying on the group for security is political. Spiritually speaking, that group just can’t provide security from the third circle (Read “Circles of Life” and part two, “Storm in a Teacup”).

Some may say we can only do what we learn from our belonging groups, but I believe we all bring along our free will and sense of justice from before birth. Knowing that helps us understand reciprocation; naturally, we tend to gravitate towards or feel obligated to reciprocate to our belonging groups and to God. We are even willing to commit spiritual crimes if our politics of belonging are out of control. This is where our free will and personal sense of justice take a back seat, but not listening to these spiritual inner voices can harm us individually; PTSD can become a reality. If we are spiritually aware, we would see clearly to the point where we can separate the politics of our belonging groups from our spirituality.

If you see yourself only as the body and brain, your life may lack fulfillment or seem incomplete. If you cannot add spirituality to your day-to-day life, it may seem like sex without love, eating without nourishment, receiving without giving. Thus, a mortal life is lived with discontentment and without spiritual fulfillment.

If you feel spiritually empty, you may try to achieve fulfillment by fitting in or impressing others, or you will die with a desire to be admired by others. This is the wrong path for spiritual fulfillment. It would be like working or living in a toxic environment where you lose happiness and contentment, especially on a deeper level.

Killing innocent beings for the approval or admiration of your belonging group is a clear sign of lacking a personal sense of justice and of misusing free will. As human beings, especially evolved ones, we all possess the knowledge of how to use our God-given free will and personal sense of justice. If in this day and age, we cannot use these gifts of God, we are spiritually bankrupt. Unfortunately, we find the spiritual side of ourselves useless, and it is all because of our powerful and brainwashing politics of belonging to our groups.

Justifying terrorism or counter-terrorism-related innocent killings is especially related to this human individual weakness. Personal sense of justice and use of free will are human individual strengths. They can not only make us aware of injustice but also help us understand how an individual is not limited to belonging to a body part or a group of people. We all, as individuals, belong to humanity as a whole, just as a cell belongs to the body as a whole. As I wrote in part one, we don’t just belong to an arm or a leg; we are physically connected to the whole body or humanity as a whole, and spiritually, we are connected to God as a whole, not to any particular religion.

Our religions and nations are like arms or legs. Believing that you are connected to a group of people, nations, isms, or religions is a lack of individual spirituality. If your race, nation, or religion asks you to go kill innocent people for us, you, as a human individual, should have enough spiritual strength to use your God-given free will and personal sense of justice to decide for yourself and own your decisions. It is your duty to understand the politics of your belonging groups and your ability to say no to injustice simultaneously.

Cell talk, connecting science and spirituality.

Are you a warrior ant, a worker bee, or are you who you are supposed to be? Find out and become the CEO of your life so you can be what you really are.

We have been bickering and even killing each other over our differences about God’s existence. It makes me want to point towards the real problem. Whether God exists or not to you, it is still your responsibility to live a mortal life with wisdom that creates comfort not only for your body and brain but also feeds your soul, allowing you to be happy and content in all areas of life. Wisdom or God is worth a priceless pearl, yet for non-believers, it may simply be a drop of water. Each teardrop has a story behind it, so look and see what your real story is.

If you are deprived of oxygen even for minutes, you lose all functions of life. Therefore, being alive for you is not in your hands; I should say you simply can’t will it. Remember, you breathe free oxygen and you are alive and functioning because of that. If that is the case, why do you have such a big ego that makes you believe whatever is happening is exclusively due to you? If you start to look at your existence and how you function, you would understand that you consist of trillions of cells, and every cell of yours is constantly screaming out loudly to tell you about the existence of God, depending on your ability to listen.

You yourself are like the cells of the human body. They receive life-giving oxygenated and nutrient-rich blood to live and function. They may have never seen you as a whole, but they can clearly acknowledge and feel being a part of it. They try to continue to reciprocate until they expire.

As human beings, metaphorically speaking, we are all cells of God. We may not be able to see God, but it’s all about personal perceptions while we are alive. For instance, if you want to enrich your mortal life experiences, you may and should believe in God and reciprocation because our makeup points towards it. Just like our cells do for our body’s well-being in return for the body providing life-giving circumstances.

Looking at life with this metaphor, you can not only see your personal disconnects but also feel the influences of our spiritual side within the living and functioning body.

Imagine and picture that the cells in our body are communicating with each other, vigorously discussing or arguing whether the body exists or not. After further discussion, if one cell states that there is no body but we just belong to one group of cells like arms or legs, believing in that is just like believing in a group but nothing beyond. Not believing beyond the group of cells means we don’t acknowledge the reality of humanity and God, yet it is evident that there is a lot more than our groups. The reality is that all cells belong to the matter that makes up the body. The physical side is only one aspect of the complicated and complex picture of humanity and God.

For cells, how the human body functions can be a disputable fact because they can’t see the body as a whole, just like we can’t see God as a whole entity. A cell can say that God does not exist, but the part they belong to does exist for sure. So, the knowledge of the belonging group or existing body part can dictate whether the individual cell believes or not. If a cell decides it does not exist according to the knowledge of its belonging group or existing body part, it would be making a judgment with incomplete knowledge. Remember, we learn something new every day. If that’s the case, what makes you believe your existing knowledge is ultimate and complete?

As human individuals, our belonging groups make us think that we are all there is. When we look at others, they are not our friends or fellow workers for God; worse, they are portrayed as enemies who must not be trusted and actually fought against.

Before you make negative assumptions and begin to look for problems or deny the benefits of believing in God, remember that our mortal life does not have to be scientifically or mathematically correct to be fulfilling. Ultimately, it just has to be filled with reciprocation, happiness, and contentment if you want to understand the real meaning or purpose of your mortal life.

To explain what I think does not mean I want everyone to agree with me and spend their lives the way I would like them to, or the way any religion or atheist group wants them to. If you want to bring some peace, happiness, and contentment into your mortal life, you will have to learn about the extreme behaviors of humans.

My purpose in writing this is to try to make extremists from both sides come down to earth and recognize the realities of mortality, not only for themselves but also to respect others’ lives.

Most, if not all, religions start with empty words of compassion for all, but their politics of belonging overpower to the point where the word “compassion” loses its first three letters, becoming “passion”. When everyone becomes passionate about their group’s politics, the hell of prejudice and discrimination breaks loose.

“Live and let live” is a spiritual and compassionate concept. Yet, I have to ask, how is it that all religious wars, without exception, have been part of our history? To me, all religious wars have been, are, and will always be political wars, period. Our politics of belonging are so powerful that we even use God to turn our disputes over differences and territorial disputes into religious conflicts, just to rile up regular folks to passionately perpetuate these disputes.

When things don’t add up, accept the results and move on with your mortal life while you strive to find God for a pleasant journey. You don’t have to choose any politics-riddled organized religion or seek forgiveness for sins you haven’t committed. You simply have to become comfortable in your mortal skin. It’s perfectly okay to not know everything there is to know. Always remember, we are still in a process of evolution—our brain, body, and we as whole beings are not only evolving individually but collectively as well, through a God-given process. We have been and continue to evolve.

Despite learning new things every day, we often believe we know everything there is to know. Ironically, our personal time is limited. This limited time should make us all humble, but as we grow up, we somehow become infected with the politics of belonging to our groups. This infection is rampant worldwide, fostering the worst of ego, pride, honor, and related personal and social problems.

This internal strife not only pits us against each other within our groups but also leads to external disputes, and even wars with other groups over our differences. Competition in the name of belonging seems harmless in sports, but its underlying politics compels us to work against ourselves as humanity and against God. To provide a clear perspective or understanding, I will attempt to define God without politics.

Imagine deep within your arm or leg, your two body cells talking to each other, debating whether the body exists or not. Scientifically, we have ten trillion of our own cells, and our bodies function with another hundred trillion bacteria or foreign life forms. The complexity is immense, and we are still learning how to seek help when we fall ill. It’s mind-boggling to realize this system is constantly evolving.

If you believe you have everything figured out, you should feel happy and content in your mortal skin. If you don’t, you need to learn more about yourself and your own functioning, regardless of certainty about God. Remember, we have fought wars for thousands of years, and I bet no one truly knows the death toll from our differences and extreme beliefs in so-called complete knowledge. Wars fought for religious beliefs or democracies are not spiritual. Therefore, before you decide with certainty about God, understand that you yourself are a living example of God.

Just look at yourself—you are God for ten trillion personal cells and a hundred trillion bacteria within you. They have not even seen you from the outside, yet you share a life-giving relationship with each other.

Both believers and non-believers should refrain from making definitive judgments with evolving knowledge. Nonetheless, a highly intricate body with equally complex systems should provide us with sobering and humbling perspectives on life, especially given our limited time here.

Despite our scientific advancements, as human individuals, we still require spirituality to navigate aging, illness, mortality, and to find happiness and contentment. Logically, this should humble us all, but our affiliations twist things to the extent that we can be manipulated and controlled. They exploit this awareness to mold us into followers of whatever is preached to us. Maintaining personal individuality becomes challenging when everyone in the group becomes willing to kill and die for the politics of belonging. We sacrifice our individual identity to please and empower our groups, identifying ourselves by labels such as Muslim, Canadian, Black, White, Male, Female, and so forth. Yet, individually, we forget that we are blessed with free will and a personal sense of justice, and our true identity is that of a human being.

Now, let’s examine what’s problematic about believing that we exclusively belong to a group of people. The cell in the arm or leg functions as part of the body, just as a group of people, nation, race, or religion functions within humanity.

Considering this as the entire picture denies the fact that we belong to humanity as a whole, yet we are deeply divided by group politics for who knows how long.

It seems like no one wants to acknowledge reality, despite the calls for us to mature and evolve, to take the next leap of faith in humanity and unite. The undeniable facts of global warming and the risks posed by infections like Ebola or Zika are staring us in the face. Extreme weather and melting ice are speaking loudly enough, yet some people choose to play dumb, from Trump’s Mexican wall to Brexit—it’s all about the politics of division. Can we ever overcome and shift our sense of belonging from our groups to humanity? Perhaps, let’s be hopeful and optimistic.

Humanity cannot erect walls high enough to shield itself from the pressing issues at hand. The sooner we come to terms and unite, the better. Instead, we are preoccupied with building nuclear weapons and other tools of mass destruction against each other. It’s all due to our political allegiances to our “arms” or “legs,” yet we should be thinking about the entire body, because if something happens, the arms or legs cannot survive on their own.

If you claim superiority over other cells and engage in war against each other, both sides praying to God for help and seeking to destroy the other, imagine the predicament you put God in. Essentially, you are asking God to kill and destroy other parts of God. It’s understandable why prayers may not always be answered.

Understanding God and praying for peace and harmony should be the essence of prayers. A mortal being requires practical physical sustenance as well as soul-nourishing sustenance. If cells could speak, they would discuss the body much like we discuss God—unseen, yet providing a profound sense of spiritual fulfillment for a mortal being. That is, if you value personal introspection. Embracing science as an essential for modern living is important, but remember to nurture your soul, because ultimately, you are responsible for living a fulfilling life. Especially mortal life should be filled not only with reciprocity but also with profound happiness and contentment.

As I’ve mentioned in earlier posts, our sense of belonging spawns various offspring, and our ego is one of them. Humans have not been able to conquer ego since the dawn of awareness. We do and believe in things approved as truths by our respective groups. In the West, there’s a heavy emphasis on science, while in the East, religion holds significant sway. Regardless of where you belong, these are akin to arms, legs, or other parts of a larger body. So, bear with me as we try to understand how the body functions with countless different cells: brain, heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, colon, skin, immune cells, good and bad bacteria, and so forth—known and unknown.

Amidst all the chaos, there is an underlying order that keeps us alive and functioning well, akin to how we perceive God. Believing solely in belonging to an arm or leg suggests either a lack of understanding of the whole body’s function or plain ignorance due to the politics of group affiliation.

Certainly, we strive to comprehend everything scientifically. Yet, we are perpetually faced with more questions, and everything, even what science has proven, is subject to evolution. Doctors once prescribed mercury with pride in science, yet today, mercury is recognized as a deadly poison, along with many other substances we were and are fed by so-called experts.

Our governance and justice systems were once rife with prejudice and discrimination, and though they are changing, we still have a long way to go, especially spiritually. Despite our advancements, further evolution is necessary. If we liken our body to God and compare it to what is happening in the world, it wouldn’t be just two cells; it would be multiple cells arguing and harming each other, ultimately damaging the body. This can be likened to an autoimmune disease, where immune cells attack the body they belong to, oblivious to the harm they cause.

Now, imagine if we are causing spiritual pain to God in the name of our religions. Metaphorically speaking, we are on the wrong path if we seek only to secure our position as a body part. It’s evident that functioning as isolated groups is not sustainable; we need to understand how the whole body functions.

Consider this example—it’s not humorous but illustrates what’s happening within humanity: A brain cell declares to all others, “Without me, none of you can live.” The heart cell interjects, “If I stop pumping blood, you’ll perish.” The lung asserts, “I provide oxygen; without me, you can’t survive.” The liver chimes in about detoxification, the kidney about filtration, the skin about protection from infections, and the colon about nutrient absorption. Then, God speaks: “When I am present, all functions harmonize, allowing me to exist within you. If I depart, I cannot survive physically, and you cannot survive spiritually or physically.”

As beings receiving oxygenated, nutrient-rich blood from a functioning body, my metaphorical question to all humans is: Why cause pain and suffering to the body or metaphorical God? A serious reflection reveals the need to view humanity with clarity, rather than being swayed by the politics of group affiliation or bodily cells.

To me, spirituality remains an individual journey, irrespective of scientific progress, because of our individual mortality. Since spirituality can benefit or harm individuals, it is each person’s responsibility to ensure they are comfortable in their mortal skin.

My aim isn’t to belittle human knowledge; rather, I seek to aid individuals in evolving to see beyond political divisions, placing mortality and the brevity of life at the forefront of priorities.

All of this empowers us with the potential to be CEOs of our lives. As a CEO, we must take charge. Consider this: if you only care for an arm or a leg, during times like global warming, you might think the body isn’t as crucial as your limb. However, the reality is that while a body can survive with limbs severed, it cannot live independently once they’re lost.

When people belong strongly to their respective groups, they often think they only belong to a part of the body, not the entire body. To me, God represents the whole body, whereas wanting to belong exclusively to a group and desiring your body part to dominate, regardless of the pain it causes God, reflects a failure to see the bigger picture. If you can’t see it, you need to evolve further and quickly. Lack of education may contribute, but deliberate ignorance is politically driven.

The bottom line is that as human beings, we aren’t exclusively connected to one body part; we are integral parts, or main characters, of the larger picture as well. Believing otherwise reflects ongoing evolution or incomplete knowledge.

Whether it stems from sports teams, communities, races, genders, nations, or religions, if exclusivity serves only a group of people, it’s rooted in plain prejudice and discrimination. Every group harbors hidden politics behind its rules. To me, if it’s political, it isn’t spiritual—even when it comes from religions—because ultimately, it leads individuals into zones where they perpetuate prejudices and discriminate against other cells of the body.

When there’s disorder or disease in the body, the entire body feels the pain. To me, spirituality is the harmony and cure for this pain. Now, reflect on your personal reasons: why cause pain and suffering for God in return for life-giving circumstances? If you feel helpless instead of helpful, it’s not in your DNA; it’s learned behavior or a mental disorder. Otherwise, you’re directly connected to God Almighty at a personal level for reciprocation, so you have no reason to feel helpless. Seeking help from those around you and compromising your values for security reveals they can’t help themselves due to mortality. Real help lies within; seek and find God from within.

The politics of our sense of belonging has caused much pain to God. We twist it so that those causing pain are told they act in God’s name.

Always remember, with free will, God has placed many responsibilities on our individual shoulders. With these responsibilities, our life is our personal project. With our mortal nature, we must ensure our lives are lived to create order, not disorder, in the body of God.

Understanding God transforms water into a priceless pearl for you personally, empowering you to fulfill what God intended for you: a living and functioning entity for ten trillion cells and a hundred trillion bacteria. Like a cell in our body or a single grain or seed that spawns new life and more, regardless of size, a human individual resides in a vibrant galaxy of their own. No one has ever known everything, nor does anyone ever will, until we realize our full potential. So ask yourself: are you there?

Remember, we’re an unfinished construction, still in the process of completion. Look at our bodies: lifting weights builds larger muscles, attending school expands knowledge, and remarkably, the more we learn, the more we can learn without increasing head size. Our brains evolve to adapt, indicating limitless potential for evolution. Claiming we know everything there is to know is simply egotistical. While we learn from books, remember, we write books too—all products of evolving brains belonging to evolving human beings.

Sadly, in the name of group belonging, we kill and rob each other of our potential. The only way out of group politics is for individuals to see, understand, and eradicate their ingrained prejudices and discrimination. As adults, instead of perpetuating this, we instill these beliefs in future generations, ensuring God perpetually suffers from a disorder of pain despite all the good we receive.

You can view life through perfect, mathematically correct numbers and scientific truths or religious moral truths. Ultimately, individually, you must find balance; otherwise, following extremists can result in a net loss.

Your real truth is your personal mortality and free will. If you choose a cause and harm an innocent, you cannot find peace within your skin because you are your own judge. Though not prominent in the grand scheme of life, consider yourself as a responsible, living God for trillions and trillions of creatures within. To bring balance to total chaos, you are an authorized CEO. Your thoughts and feelings can be destructive for you and all the life you harbor within. By embracing your responsibilities, you can care for yourself internally and externally alike.

The desire to learn more is ingrained in all of us from before birth, so living in a confined environment isn’t suitable for human beings. All our boundaries are meant to slow down our progress to match our evolutionary rhythm. If we rush too quickly, we risk losing not only collective happiness and contentment but also suffer individually in our mortal lives—a loss greater than what our belonging groups acknowledge.

If you truly believe everything happening in your life is solely because of you or those around you, think again. The reality is, whether discussing the existence of the body or not, arms or legs cannot function independently. All systems must work together to provide life-giving substances to every cell. It’s not one versus the other; it’s the collective functioning of the body. Though we understand a lot about the body today, our knowledge remains incomplete and in progress. With incomplete knowledge, we often make assumptions—sometimes benefiting from them, other times causing harm.

It should be evident by now that all cells in the body depend on the body’s proper functioning. Despite what we are taught or feel, we cannot claim that our functioning is solely due to the groups we belong to. Your belonging groups cannot alter your mortal nature—they cannot save you from death or disease, control natural disasters, or even provide oxygen for themselves. Believing everything is orchestrated by people is a mere assumption. Since we are taught and feel that we are the sole architects of our actions, we must grasp our true influence in the grand scheme of life. I strongly advocate for free will and personal responsibility, aiming for balance rather than extremes.

Simply put, we are accountable for our actions, but dismissing accidents or placebo effects entirely is extreme. Always remember, as human individuals, our lives are personal projects. How we think matters significantly because our stress, which spawns physical illnesses among others, is closely tied to our thought patterns. Stress impacts our health, happiness, and success—my triangle of priorities. In simpler terms, without health, happiness cannot exist, and a mortal life devoid of both cannot succeed, regardless of what our belonging groups assert.

If you’re told you’ll find happiness in the afterlife, consider this: if you haven’t learned to be happy with free oxygen and a healthy functioning body in your lifetime, how could God make you happy after death without physical control? Spiritual happiness and all pleasures are exclusively felt by the physical body—it’s as straightforward as that. All pleasures require a physical body to be enjoyed; you cannot savor food, not even milk and honey, without one. Whether God grants us physical bodies after death is debatable scientifically, but belief is a separate matter. Should one wager on it or place all their hopes in that basket? It’s a personal choice. To me, sacrificing these living years without happiness solely to please your belonging groups by adhering to their rules would be extreme.

Returning to stress:

If we cannot find happiness, we are inherently unhealthy. Being unhappy and unhealthy drastically impacts our measurable living years, making it crucial for a CEO to monitor extreme behaviors. Our uncontrolled sense of belonging isn’t solely linked to our belief systems; it can manifest in race, gender, and nationalism. As mortals with free will, we are CEOs. It is our responsibility to live our mortal lives accordingly.

If you need to adjust your mindset, do so while you still can. If your learned knowledge steals your happiness and contentment, you cannot blame God or those around you—you were blessed with free will. God might say, “I gave you free will for a reason; you bear more responsibility than your group acknowledges. Take charge, endure the emotional stress, and benefit from it. If you fail to step up, your mortal nature indicates time is slipping away, so act.”

A mortal’s goal should be to accumulate happiness and contentment. Sacrificing these for the approval of handlers reduces you to little more than a worker bee or warrior ant. Remember, human individuals are genetically more complex than ants and bees, thanks to our free will. Do not diminish yourself from what you are—a CEO. A CEO’s life may be complex, but you have the capacity to manage it.

Chief Executive Officers of their lives must also understand this message. Misinterpret me, and you might think I advocate selfishness, but I do not. My true message is that you must find balance in your personal life, especially in oppressive societies where survival takes precedence. Regardless of my words, physical survival must come first so that you can continue your thought process.

A CEO must understand how to run a successful company. Typically, a company comprises several departments. The same applies to your individual life. Regardless of the organization you belong to, in a mortal’s life project, personal happiness and contentment cannot be overlooked. If you perceive me as promoting selfishness, read my posts with an open mind, especially “Your Body and Brain,” where I discuss how deep personal happiness stems from serving—including yourself. Knowing how to self-serve is a department that will take care of itself. Do not treat others—or yourself—differently; subservience to others or even to oneself is extreme, a demotion from CEO to department head.

In today’s modern world, CEOs also bear the responsibility of examining scientific facts and the changing world to reinvent faith in spirituality. Again, this is a personal and individual responsibility of the CEO.

Even science revolves around repeatable facts, but a mortal being must first understand personal mortality and emotional fulfillment in temporary existence before delving into a life driven solely by facts and figures. Numbers and facts hold no significance to transient beings; what truly matters is happiness and contentment. I assert that it’s not about religion but rather spiritual satisfaction, essential whether you’re a believer or not. If either extreme—religious fervor or scientific rigor—is robbing you of happiness and contentment, it’s crucial to take control of your life. Remember, you have several different departments; focusing solely on one disrupts spiritual harmony, something you cannot afford to lose in mortal life.

I leave it to religious zealots and scientists to debate extremes, but I believe it all boils down to ego, a product of the political sense of belonging to respected groups. You cannot derive pleasure at the expense of others, so blindly joining groups and following their doctrines does not align with the role of a CEO. Regardless of your thoughts or feelings about mortal life, it is plainly and simply influenced by politics.

It isn’t solely based on facts because your true reality is your mortality, and as a mortal, your utmost responsibility is to find balance and avoid extremes and related spiritual offenses. Reciprocate and find happiness and contentment. If your religion or science provides you with that spiritual satisfaction, follow it, but do not demean others with your incomplete knowledge.

It’s not just egotistical; it’s prejudicial, discriminatory, and born of ignorance. Claiming our knowledge is complete is clearly false, especially as we learn something new every day. Look around and assess where you stand in the crowd; ask yourself if we’re discovering new truths or disproving old theories. If the latter is true, delve into yourself and understand what compels you to claim you know everything—scientifically, religiously, or otherwise. Human history is rife with examples of killing people over beliefs or differing thoughts. We invest emotional effort in proving others wrong simply to validate our ancestors. From religions to forms of governance, factions have battled and violated human rights in the name of ever-changing knowledge. From one holy book to another, from sects within religions to ongoing bloodshed spanning millennia.

Spirituality has been universal and consistent throughout world history and remains so in today’s modern era. It has consistently voiced its truths, yet we persist fervently in our political affiliations and sense of belonging to groups. Our politics of belonging birth egotistical behaviors; thus, it is unequivocally the personal responsibility of individuals to sift through politics and recognize the benefits of spirituality.

Consider our relationships with cats and dogs; often, our bonds with pets surpass those with fellow humans due to our unburdened expectations.

Whether on an individual, communal, national, or religious level, our core issue remains rooted in the politics of belonging. Persona, pride, ego, and honor are all intertwined with our sense of belonging. Do not misunderstand me—as evident from my writing, I advocate for balance. A CEO must combat extremes’ root causes, so I will outline how I scrutinize the origins of our problems. While I may appear critical of the concept of belonging, my criticism is aimed at the politics surrounding group affiliation, which fosters persona, pride, ego, and honor, thereby perpetuating prejudice and discrimination.

It’s not wrong to possess acquired knowledge, but it’s how we wield that knowledge that often goes awry. For instance, when individuals harbor prejudice and discrimination, they often do so under the guise of group identity, further stoking already hostile environments. By failing to question these biases, we perpetuate prejudice and discrimination, exacerbating rather than resolving our real societal issues.

As human beings, our population is rapidly expanding, alongside significant scientific and technological advancements, making our world feel smaller. Consequently, understanding human relationships has become increasingly crucial.

I advocate for balance and the exploration of evolutionary processes, yet I staunchly oppose prejudice and discrimination. My journey into the roots of these behaviors consistently leads back to the politics of group identity. If you embark on a similar inquiry, you’ll likely arrive at the same conclusion. Today, I delve into our politics and their impact on our relationships.

From personal disputes to age-old religious conflicts, it’s always the emotions of individual humans that fuel these fires, regardless of their origins. If these conflicts stem from our group identities, it’s up to the individual to evolve and understand their personal motivations—be it persona, pride, ego, or honor. Addressing these issues at the individual level is where we should begin to seek solutions.

Consider two people embroiled in an argument, blaming each other for a dispute. If we truly had absolute control over our circumstances—including life, death, and disease—such conflicts would seem trivial. Our troubles often stem from the assumptions ingrained in our acquired knowledge. To truly understand, we must read between the lines.

Imagine being told you possess free will, yet your allegiance to group identity renders it ineffective. You find yourself adhering to political rules rather than exercising your free will. In such a scenario, are you truly using the full potential nature has endowed upon you? Are you using your free will to pursue your personal growth, or are you merely conforming to your group’s dictates under the guise of spiritual truth?

Personally, I believe blindly following rules or succumbing to brainwashing can lead to trouble. Decisions should align with the times and their demands. On a lighter note, here’s a joke sent to me from Pakistan in Punjabi, fitting into this discussion:

During training, an officer falls into a well. Soldiers rush to help, tossing down a rope to pull him up. Upon seeing him, they salute, inadvertently letting go of the rope. After a few failed attempts, someone suggests calling a senior officer. The general, conducting an inspection nearby, arrives to assist. As the major is being pulled up, he spots the higher-ranking officer, salutes, and promptly falls back into the well. The onlookers then shout, “Call the civilian!”

On a more serious note, Ramadan is a fasting period for Muslims. They eat before sunrise and after sunset. However, blindly adhering to these rules without considering regional conditions can pose challenges. In northern regions, where daylight varies significantly between seasons, fasting and prayer timings based on the sun’s position become impractical. Fasting and prayers serve not just to instill discipline or obedience, but also to tame our primal urges and foster spiritual growth. While fasting is a common practice across many religions, it’s crucial to adapt these practices to evolving human needs.

Believing in religious doctrines or legal codes as immutable truths can hinder our understanding of evolution and even of God. If rules were divine mandates, we’d be akin to ants or bees. Instead, human civilization has soared beyond these limitations. We fly where winged creatures cannot, dive into the depths of the oceans without gills, and explore the inner recesses of mountains without claws. Our ability to perceive beyond the naked eye is a testament to our unique capabilities. Therefore, undermining our potential is contrary to what I believe to be God’s will. Our achievements are evidence of His divine plan.

Politics often simplifies God as good and the Devil as bad, but this perception is purely political. Blaming or glorifying them is absurd because each of us possesses free will and a personal sense of justice. Evading personal responsibility by attributing physical actions to an invisible entity is deceptive. Remember, humans are the ones who physically make things happen, for better or worse.

If you delve into the concept of free will, you’ll realize that both God and the Devil lose their significance. Our responsibilities as human beings increase exponentially.

Depending on one’s perspective and inner strength, one can uncover the roots of their inferiority complexes. My “theory of five bucks” simplifies this concept (read more about it). By focusing on our abilities rather than disabilities, we enrich our mortal experiences and lead fuller lives.

Our existence could resemble that of ants and bees if we neglect or fail to acknowledge our free will. To effect change, we need free will, a capable body, a sound mind, and the freedom to act. Life need not be perfect; we don’t need all the answers during our mortal existence. We lack the luxury of perfect control over our affairs. If you’re among those who feel otherwise, keep the nature of mortality in perspective—it grounds us and sobers us from the intoxication of certainty.

I believe in exploration and discovery. For instance, I believe in a God of order and harmony, not one of destruction and punishment. Despite our actions and nature, we are not mere animals to be conditioned with rewards and punishments. I believe in our ability to self-regulate through knowledge of free will and personal responsibility. Does this belief system conflict with my Muslim faith? Perhaps, according to those who reject evolution and adaptation to contemporary needs.

I believe no one should be compelled to change their beliefs through coercion or carrot-and-stick tactics. Personally, I believe in God and reciprocate His blessings and abilities, including the capacity to think and write.

We often gaze into space as if God resides outside us. Certainly, the cosmos operates within an order essential to our survival. The vastness and chaos of space underscore the miracle of our existence. Look within: you have ten trillion cells, supported by a hundred trillion other living organisms within you. The individual functionality within us is miraculous, yet we boast of personal agency, especially when belittling others and asserting our superior knowledge.

If you believe in a scientific worldview where life is mere chance and survival of the fittest, examine the sophistication and order amidst the chaos of your existence. Disbelief is one thing, but failing to benefit from a belief system in mortal life is a choice. I don’t impose my beliefs on others; everyone navigates their own journey. However, being a decent human being is essential, not just for others but for self-respect, as we all inhabit our physical bodies. Unhappiness and discontent signal an unfulfilled life; address the underlying causes.

Life, to me, is inherently complex. Simplifying it by blaming the Devil and praising God undermines ordinary individuals, robbing them of self-esteem. It suggests they are insignificant and absolved of personal responsibility. This lack of self-esteem only benefits the elite or controlling authorities, who use group identity politics to shame or silence dissenters.

We’re told life is as simple as A-B-C: believe in God to evade thinking and questioning, or reject belief and assume full responsibility. What’s the outcome of these systems? Regardless, we must face facts like mortality—scientists and religious adherents alike cannot escape this universal truth. Father Time and mortality spare no one; hence, we must individually seize control of our lives. We possess free will to navigate our mortal existence comfortably. If religious belief offers solace, embrace it. If a scientific worldview resonates, that’s your prerogative. But refrain from denigrating others or waging wars over differing viewpoints.

If you believe that your race, gender, nation, or religion should dominate the world, it’s akin to thinking an arm or leg should govern the entire body. The body functions with its various parts, not by any single cell alone. While cells have specific roles and functions, they depend not only on each other but also on the organizing or harmonizing force within, which I call God. In essence, cells contribute to bodily function but do not run the entire show.

Egotistically, we may assert our desires, but without oxygenated, nutrient-rich blood reaching every cell, we cannot function. Despite the chaotic environment, this organizing force, both internal and external, requires equitable consideration from all of us. Each cell has its place in the body, metaphorically speaking, just as each individual has a place in the world.

If you believe only your existence is justified, it’s not a matter of nature but rather a result of your politics of group identity. Logical examples abound, yet we often fail to connect the dots. While the spirit or soul requires a functioning body for physical performance, without the soul or spirit, neither can operate. Neither humans nor groups of people control life’s outcomes exclusively—so what drives our actions? Understanding life’s wisdom compels each of us to explore this question personally, without relying solely on past narratives, and with a sense of personal responsibility to become CEOs of our own lives, avoiding blindly following well-trodden paths with predictable results.

As cells, we are evolving beings; we know there’s more to our existence than mere willpower. Today, with the widespread advocacy for equal human rights and democracies as preferred governance systems, we recognize that no single group of cells directs the entire body.

Awareness of global warming and the necessity of space stations underscores our interconnectedness. Just as God is necessary for humanity’s function, so too are all individuals needed. If you still believe your group is superior or that joining a specific group will elevate your humanity, then humanity must evolve further to overcome our tendencies toward prejudice and discrimination against others.

Understanding is accessible to those who seek it, driven by a commitment to achieving equality. Despite our efforts, our allegiance to group identities remains a significant barrier to the next leap forward that humanity must take. Simply shifting to a new paradigm—embracing humanity as a whole rather than the segmented parts like an arm or leg—can facilitate this leap.

The United Nations has existed for decades, yet it has not effectively united humanity. This failure stems not only from our allegiance to group identities but also from its reluctance to fully embrace democracy and equal human rights as foundational principles. Despite nearly two hundred member nations, the United Nations seems to regress, contrary to its stated mission of peace. Rather than uniting, it often divides further—a stark contradiction to its purported purpose.

Our attempts to unify humanity are passive and misguided, exemplified by the veto system. Granting veto power to a select few nations renders the organization biased and discriminatory. Despite the United Nations’ opposition, America’s invasion of Iraq proceeded unchecked. Kashmir remains disputed after seventy years and three wars. Why do we struggle to overcome our allegiance to group identities? Even our foremost global organization is swayed by these affiliations rather than prioritizing humanity as a whole.

When war crimes and human rights violations occur worldwide, we must scrutinize their root causes and the efficacy of our responses. An organization equipped with a comprehensive justice system but lacking enforcement capabilities is ineffective. It requires the fortitude and authority to assert its values. Ignoring conflicts only perpetuates endless violence. The Kashmir conflict escalated India and Pakistan into nuclear powers, underscoring the need for global political transformation. We strive for political correctness, allowing religions to amass wealth and influence without taxation. This perpetuates prejudice and discrimination indefinitely.

Since its inception, the United Nations has utilized the veto system, a clear violation of equal human rights, yet it purports to unite nations. I advocate for its renaming to reflect the unity of humanity under equal individual human rights. No nation, race, gender, or religion should enjoy privileged status, as we all share the same composition and function. Education in equality should extend beyond political favoritism to encompass basic human rights.

Remember, an arm or leg doesn’t control the body; not even the harmonizing force I call God. It’s about the functioning of the entire system, yet despite all our advancements, we seem to regress against the natural course. Nature continually reminds us to cooperate, for our collective benefit or suffering is intertwined. Humanity comprises the body of humanity.

Consider if you can sense this unity, akin to how cells perceive the body as their reality. They haven’t seen it, but they experience life’s blessings and reciprocate instinctively. As individuals, what do you contribute to this reciprocity? Working, paying taxes, and directing those funds to support society’s needy epitomize your contribution. God does not demand—indeed, God does not need—anything from you, not even obedience in exchange for blessings. Fulfilling the needs of fellow human beings constitutes your physical contribution. While taxes may appear socialist, scrutinizing them reveals a spiritual dimension. Embrace this blessing as you transition from recipient to benefactor.

If religious teachings spanning millennia have not achieved their intended goals, it’s due to our allegiance to group identities. These teachings extol belonging to a specific group—absurd in an era where conflicts are no longer resolved with spears and swords but with nuclear and mass destructive weapons.

I am not discussing the authenticity of religion or science; I am simply highlighting their potential harms or benefits. If we destroy each other with nuclear weapons, what good is science doing for humanity? Conversely, if we continue perpetual violence over beliefs, when will we recognize the dangers of our organized and politicized religions? We must critically examine the root causes of extremism, both collectively and individually, to eradicate it from our evolving humanity altogether.

We all bear individual and collective responsibility to evolve with the changing times, not only in one aspect of life. For example, if we advance scientifically but dismiss the relevance of religion, sociology, spirituality, or emotional fulfillment, we are choosing to evolve selectively. Personally, I believe it’s our responsibility to evolve holistically to become complete human beings.

If you preach nationalism, religious glorification, or political agendas based on a sense of belonging, yet act contrary due to political considerations, it creates logical inconsistencies. At the highest levels of our organizational systems, such as the United Nations, equal human rights are openly advocated, yet the institution maintains a veto system in its constitution. How can these contradictions be overlooked? While politics is necessary to govern systems, we must eliminate these practices of contradiction. Otherwise, we’ll never overcome prejudice, discrimination, wars, and hatred.

I believe that preaching allegiance to our groups harms humanity as a whole. The solution lies in belonging to humanity as a whole.

So, how should individuals propel civilization forward to replace outdated security politics when even our foremost global organization, like the United Nations, operates on a veto-based, discriminatory manifesto? We must embrace a new paradigm to transcend old ways of doing things.

It may be challenging for conservatives, but in the name of peace and humanity’s survival, we may need to learn and adapt. Individually and collectively, we must introspect deeply to discern whether we’re connected merely as an arm or leg, or as part of the entire body. To me, it’s not even a question, but for individuals steeped in group identity politics, it can be daunting. I hope my analogy of the human body and its cells helps illustrate that logically, we are connected to humanity, not just its parts.

Spirituality teaches us about our mortality and the imperative of leading a decent life, while our group identities often mold us into warrior ants or worker bees. Regardless of science or religion, it is essential for each of us to scrutinize the motives behind our actions. We must aspire to spiritual growth because, ultimately, we will judge our lives based on our personal sense of justice—whether we’ve used our free will to live a meaningful mortal life or squandered it as mere worker bees or warrior ants.

Consider how cells converse about the body’s existence among themselves. They’ve never seen us from the outside, just as we cannot directly perceive God, no matter how advanced or sophisticated we become. This awareness turns a simple tear into a priceless pearl of wisdom. Before assuming evolution should govern all aspects of your life—be it science or religion—allow yourself to emotionally grow in love and compassion. This way, you can experience a complete, mortal life filled with contentment and happiness.

Persona, Planet control and mortality.

Persona,Planet control and mortality.

May 28, 2019 

By our nature as human individuals, we are all equipped with free will and a personal sense of justice. Therefore, it does not matter what our race, gender, nationality, or religious bias dictates—ultimately, we are personally and fully responsible for our actions. For instance, if you attend a mosque or church and pray to God for security in life, you present yourself as a religious individual, necessitating that you behave in a good and civilized manner towards others. While it is beneficial for good people to embrace belief systems that promote spiritual and ethical conduct, assessing crime rates within religious societies does not consistently show them performing better. The notion that a religious person is inherently better than others remains unproven. Consider someone who attends religious services frequently but lacks spiritual values—they may merely conform to their public persona. Understanding the essence of being Muslim, Christian, or part of any religion involves embodying goodness and spiritual principles. As previously mentioned, exercising free will underpins spiritual awareness, teaching us not to inflict upon others what we ourselves dislike or would not want for our loved ones. If you believe that non-believers or those who pray differently within your religion are somehow inferior, these sentiments foster prejudice and discrimination, thereby detracting from your spiritual growth. Even the slightest notion of superiority can erode spirituality. Being part of a community that prompts you to attend places of worship for political rather than practical reasons undermines true spiritual practice. Acting kindly towards everyone is godly and spiritual because it transcends boundaries—it is universal. Conversely, showing kindness selectively based on political or local affiliations lacks universality and godliness.

To me, spirituality, God, and humanity are universal and devoid of prejudice and discrimination. Bad and good are universal concepts; hence, both manifest across all aspects of life and every corner of the globe. If your religion advocates prejudice or discrimination against non-believers or other believers, purging politics from spirituality can restore its essence. If your pursuit is for power, it is political; if you seek to reclaim land seized by others, it reflects pure politics and greed—leave religion and God out of it. Remember, spirituality and God remain untainted by politics. However, if you are governed by worldly desires, including invoking God and the devil to shirk personal responsibilities, then everything—including God—becomes a tool for political ends. To determine if you are such an individual, scrutinize your persona, ego, pride, and honor. Examine their origins and significance to you. If you delve deep enough, you will uncover your allegiance to a group identity, shaped by societal influences—unless you assume the role of CEO in your life. As CEO, you will discern the injustices spawned by political imbalances. Let’s explore how some social issues stem from our allegiance to group identities—from ego, pride, honor, and persona-related conflicts pervading our individual, societal, national, or religious lives, fostering prejudice and discrimination.

I advocate for belonging within a balanced framework of personal freedom. Only then can I employ my free will and sense of justice to live out my mortal years in pursuit of spiritual truth. If you fail to address the root cause, your allegiance to group identity will continually thwart your search for spirituality. Prejudice and discrimination have no place in your mortal existence if you seek happiness and contentment through spirituality. If torn internally by a sense of justice, it is imperative to address it promptly, given our temporal constraints. Such internal turmoil is not communal but personal. Whether you acknowledge it or not, you are potentially the CEO of your own life.

The world’s mounting issues often stem from internally conflicted individuals. If you suspect being one, cultivate inner balance to foster inner peace and, by extension, outward harmony. If you hesitate to question the education that stifles your free will, sense of justice, or true identity, you are already paying the price. To attain happiness and contentment, reinvent yourself to challenge wrongs, even those within your own affiliations.

By following, you hinder your progress toward achieving CEO status. Although age and mortality shape our human traits, accepting the responsibilities of a CEO empowers us to restore balance and account for our individual selves—a department needing attention. Often, our personal happiness, contentment, and inner peace—cherished jewels—are squandered in pursuit of group acceptance. Our self-destructive behaviors—seeking approval, conformity, admiration—stem logically from our personas.

LET’S REVISIT THE CONCEPT: Begin by identifying your surname—your immediate affiliation within a group. Next, reflect on your origin—from local community to state, nation, race, gender, and religious beliefs—these identities shape you within a group but do not encompass humanity as a whole. Now, consider yourself scientifically, genetically, and spiritually: at your core, you are a human being, imparting physicality to spiritual divinity. Do you still identify solely with a specific group? Perhaps, but I challenge that notion. If you possess free will and engage in interdependent thought and action, you exceed conventional beliefs.

Now, ask yourself: why do you have free will? Where did it come from? Did you learn about it from your group affiliations, or have you always possessed it? Similarly, consider your personal sense of justice. If these traits—your personality, alpha or beta status—aren’t learned behaviors, then they likely accompany you from birth.

Physically, emotionally, mentally, spiritually, and genetically, you are not a worker bee or a warrior ant; you are a human being wielding free will and possessing a distinct human identity. If you ever doubt your humanity, examine your actions. Deep within, free will and personal justice define your capacity for decency. Opting to become a worker bee or a warrior ant is a self-demotion from what God intended for you. As long as you live as a human, there’s always time to further understand and achieve your true potential.

Religions often serve as political rhetoric if they lack equal spiritual justice for all. True inner and outer peace lies in spirituality. To truly discover, begin with yourself. Strip away political identities. Our surname should be “human being” or, dare I say, “God,” as all good deeds attributed to God are performed by us, individual humans.

Live your life as a mortal, for that’s what you are. If you try to control everything, you’ll only harm yourself. People board and exit your life train as it moves along. With free will, choice is inevitable. If you struggle to let go, remember that mortality demands it. Learn this wisdom sooner rather than later. In our mortal journey, accumulating happiness and contentment is our true treasure. Yielding control to external desires risks obscuring this reality. Embrace the wisdom of living within mortality.

Anything—knowledge, systems of living, teachings, or preachings—should enhance our individual lives for the better, internally and externally. Otherwise, these systems reduce us to mere puppets, diminishing the importance of our happiness and contentment. Some even advocate leaving happiness for the afterlife, viewing this life as an exclusive period for sacrifice. I believe our lives are gifts, a direct interaction between the individual and God. All else stems from human insecurity and politics.

Earlier, I mentioned warrior ants and worker bees. Now, I assert: you’re not a hamster on a wheel in a cage either. God wouldn’t grant you free will if it were unnecessary. Thankfully, with free will comes choice. If you feel the need to control, it’s likely you’ve been sold an immortality-linked lifestyle, exploiting your insecurities for profit. Be yourself and adjust to live comfortably within your mortal skin. Pursuing external comfort may divert you from reality. Understand the essence of living with mortality.

If someone has more than you, consider those who have less. Justice must begin with yourself. If you lament not having everything in life, continue striving while appreciating what you already possess. In my blog on the horizon’s ladder, I suggest comparing yourself to those with better lives for inspiration and to those less fortunate to foster appreciation.

Leading a life of perpetual deprivation diminishes the mortal experience. Eventually, we must lock our mansions and embark on an unknown journey. Rather than viewing yourself as superior due to wealth or a better life, recognize your reality and remain humble. This applies whether you pray fervently or are atheist. Mortality unites us all; therefore, humility, coupled with evolving knowledge, is spiritual. Human truths evolve continuously. Extreme beliefs—whether atheist or religious fanatic—should be challenged.

If God intended us to be subservient, our evolving nature and boundless potential would not exist. All human knowledge, from national constitutions to established religions, remains subject to change. Justice should be impartial; spiritually, it should be universal, leaving no room for prejudice or discrimination.

Remaining stagnant within these boundaries will inevitably lead you to deny human evolution’s realities. Closing your eyes to reality won’t change the facts of your mortal existence, which is fleeting. Remember, your relationship is directly with God, not the people to whom you belong. They cannot provide the oxygen you breathe. Trust in God, not people with political agendas. Whether promising a secure place in heaven or selling insurance for the afterlife, these philosophies exploit your belief in immortality—something none possess.

The complexities overwhelm many of us, leading to assumptions. Assumptions, while essential for progress, can also prove detrimental. Acting on them to the extent of causing harm or death is irresponsible. Mortality remains an unchanging fact, regardless of trends. Intellectualizing every aspect of your mortal life may alienate you from humanity and spirituality, irrespective of religious or atheistic beliefs.

First and foremost, embrace your humanity; respect your individuality. You transform spirituality into physical actions. Rediscover your true identity by delving deep within and assuming the role of CEO in your life.

Remember, you are not merely a persona; you are the CEO capable of standing tall from within, unburdened by the need for acceptance or fitting in. Each of us possesses the potential to embody divinity. Seek proof in the deeds—good or bad—emanating from human hands.

Many schools of thought advocate prejudice and discrimination. Whether at the community, national, or religious level, we’re entangled in politics, obstructing spirituality, humanity, and God. Even within academic disciplines—from mathematics and science to medicine, from socialism and communism to religion—criticism abounds among opposing factions.

From clashes between nations and religions to individuals bickering over who is right and 100% correct, this has been, is, and will be common for a long time—unless as individuals, we start taking charge and responsibility for our actions. If you’ve been taught prejudice and discrimination against opposing groups or those who don’t blindly follow knowledge as you do, you’ve been misled. It’s time to evolve individually and embrace equal human rights.

Religions typically originate where ordinary human intellect fails to rationalize, where two plus two isn’t four, and where humans aren’t machines or mechanical objects. Treating humans as such reflects only partial understanding. We must break out of our narrow viewpoints, evolve, and recognize there’s much more to learn and address—like global warming, equal human rights, our true human identity (our last name), and where humans stand in the broader scheme of life. Spiritually educated individuals would logically use all knowledge to live justly, including self-justice.

Our approach to death and control significantly impacts our stress levels throughout life. Our overall health hinges on this fundamental discrepancy. Evaluate where you stand in causing your own stress. If you’re contributing to your own problems, acknowledge and address them by becoming a CEO who can maintain balance among your body, mind, and spirit. I previously discussed this in a blog titled “Your Body and Brain.”

Remember, loving yourself, others, or your community relates to the proper functioning of your body and brain. Our expectations should align with a well-functioning body. For example, if someone suffers from a brain disorder like Alzheimer’s, it can distort their perception of love, God, and everything in between. A dysfunctional body undermines spirituality and community cohesion. A human lacks completeness without spirit, body, and brain working harmoniously. Achieving this balance is within our capability, though not everyone delves deep enough to assume this responsibility, whether due to lack of effort or overwhelming political influence. Regardless, you must become a CEO to realize your authority.

Much of this stems from an educational framework that views humans as inherently sinful animals with no inherent worth, operating under the sway of God or the Devil. This educational approach, in my view, has always been and will remain flawed. It’s up to each individual to critically examine their education and break free from the political influences of their affiliations.

Upon doing so, you’ll discover you need not live under the control of societal norms, nor sacrifice your happiness and contentment to maintain a persona. Spiritual fulfillment is the mortal’s objective. If religious rules alone don’t suffice, you’re missing out on practical prayer. Remember, God doesn’t demand mere obedience; God needs your physicality—your effort and action—to manifest spirituality. Obedience primarily serves earthly authorities who may manipulate politics to conform you into a compliant sheep, hamster, ant, bee, or whatever else. Break free from the politics of belonging to discover your true identity. Opt for practical prayers where you aid those who seek divine assistance; you become the vessel for godly work.

Consider if you live through a persona; if so, what’s the cost? As a mortal being, you bear significant responsibility for your actions. Given your personal happiness and contentment are at stake, you should matter more to yourself due to your mortal nature.

At day’s end, how you invest in your persona matters. As CEO of your life, all facets are your responsibility. If you’re suffering, you must ascertain why. Your persona stems from your sense of belonging. If your happiness and contentment fall short, politics of belonging may have robbed you of life’s greatest mortal treasure.

What God is to you? A Pearl or Water?

 

Let’s start this one with you as an individual. Ask yourself, who are you, really?

As a human individual, one must always remember that all human knowledge is related to every field, whether it’s related to religious beliefs and spirituality, science, technology, mathematics, or medicine. Right up until the present day, nothing remains incomplete. Why are we constantly learning and inventing new things? It’s because of the human individual’s continuously evolving nature and their potential. You can believe wholeheartedly in anything and live accordingly as an individual, but realities are much broader than just our inherited or taught knowledge. Not only is what we have learned insufficient, but with our evolving nature, there is no cap, ceiling, or limit. Whether it comes from our constitutions and religions, all human knowledge has not been, is not, and never will be completed for humanity. For the individual, however, due to mortality, it’s a different story. It’s very important for the individual to be flexible and keep room for learning new things.

Whether God exists or not has never been the real issue; in actuality, it’s human wisdom that has the potential to assist the human individual in living a mortal life with hope, optimism, happiness, and contentment. The wisdom of God is highly personal and individual, so both its benefits and harms are for each of us individually. I happen to perceive the wisdom of God as a pearl. However, if you don’t believe in God, that’s fine with me, but to you personally, a tear is just a drop of water regardless of how it came into existence. You can’t truly benefit from it because you can’t acknowledge its value. Two plus two equals four is mathematically correct, as are numerous scientific discoveries; they can only assist you if you apply that knowledge during your lifetime. The same goes for unknown knowledge; you can benefit from it, but you don’t yet comprehend how it functions, similar to placebo effects. As you age, that two plus two doesn’t always add up, but due to our ego, we don’t wish to live with inaccuracies. If we fail to adapt as things change, we lose our happiness and contentment, and in a mortal life, happiness and contentment are crucial; ignoring them can make life difficult to bear. It’s difficult to accept that we don’t know everything. If you believe that you must know everything, remember that your time will run out, so don’t forget to participate in all areas of life. The best way to handle it is to stay in a continuous state of learning; making decisions or believing in the unknown egotistically may seem natural, but it isn’t appropriate for entities like human beings that are constantly evolving. Today’s truths can be proven false tomorrow, so it’s okay not to know everything because that’s how you keep yourself open to learning more and evolving. When it comes to science and religion, we are instructed to believe in knowledge as ultimate, which implies we are instructed to believe there’s nothing more to learn about it. Given that we are still discovering new things every day, no one should claim that any human knowledge is complete knowledge. Passionate individuals urge you to believe in it due to their sense of belonging’s political nature, so it’s up to you to question it and surpass those limitations. We are capable of embracing spiritual wisdom, which can genuinely assist us individually in infusing life into our years of existence. Regardless of my level of evolution, I personally believe that viewing God as a pearl rather than merely a drop of water is a wise choice. I believe anyone can benefit from it; it can help a person discover inner peace and then share it with others. This pearl aids me in exploring my inner self and experiencing profound happiness and contentment. I don’t merely live life to nourish my body and mind; I also believe in nourishing my soul to achieve balance and live a life of inner peace. Understanding that not knowing everything is a human trait, my happiness and contentment mean more to me, especially as a mortal, than egotistically claiming to possess complete knowledge. (Read You, body, and mind).

Everything related to our past and present knowledge is within our reach, and what we decide to personally consume and wisely live is our choice. Interestingly, it’s our responsibility to utilize all available knowledge to lead a healthy life, which enables us to live happily and enjoy a successful life regardless of mortality.

If you utilize all available technologies, how can you serve yourself and become the CEO of your own life? If not, it’s your choice, and believe me, there are many people who cannot live their lives as CEOs. They live and die for their groups of belonging, proudly, irrespective of their ever-developing potential.

Remember, you’re not only responsible for your actions; you’re also responsible for the consequences. Therefore, becoming the CEO of your own life is crucial for each of us individually.

What makes us a CEO.

Since you have no control over the time and era of your birth, your oxygen supply, how long you’ll live, get sick, age, and die, etc., in a nutshell, despite your thoughts on what you need to know and what to control, you have two blogs.

Navigating through life, especially as a mortal, requires profound wisdom. While the details can be vast, for now, we will focus on our abilities to use free will and a personal sense of justice to understand our purpose here.

What is the purpose of our existence, and in the grand scheme of life, what is our real value as individuals?

One thing is clear: as human beings, we each have a life that is our personal project. We are the CEOs of our own lives. Since life has several different departments, we must juggle responsibilities and attend to all aspects of life to achieve a fulfilling mortal existence.

Living exclusively in one department of life might be intellectually satisfying for some, but I personally don’t want to be starved in any other areas of my life. Emotional richness, physical expression, and spiritual fulfillment can all be part of an intellectually lived life.

Let’s consider this example to clarify a complex problem humanity has faced in the past and continues to struggle with today: our passionate political allegiance to our groups. This sense of belonging can override an individual’s CEO status. If you lose your personal identity and sense of justice, becoming prejudiced and discriminatory because of group politics, you are not respecting the CEO status you received from God before birth. If you believe you are solely what your group calls you to be, you have forgotten your true identity as a human being. When born into humanity, you are first a human being. Labels such as boy, girl, black, white, Muslim, Christian, or any nationality are secondary. Regardless of these labels, you are first and foremost a human being.

Believing you are defined by your family, color, gender, race, community, nationality, or religion connects you to prejudice and discrimination. Look at yourself genetically, scientifically, and spiritually to understand your true nature. You are directly connected to God and called a human being before any other identity, even before your name. Metaphorically, as human beings, we are part of God’s body, and we make God’s spiritual body function physically.

Picture yourself as a cell in a human body. You receive oxygenated, nutrient-rich blood to keep you functioning and alive, and in return, you keep the body functioning. This analogy explains why and how you should have a direct relationship with God.

God is not a conventional figure pulling our strings from above. There is much more than what politically tainted religions have taught us. Spirituality has suffered, but today, even ordinary individuals like me are learning about equal human rights and becoming aware of the purity of politics in spirituality.

To me, God is an understanding you can personally and individually grasp. It’s like a tear rolling down your cheek; depending on how you look at it, it can be a pearl or just a drop of water. I wrote about this in detail in a previous blog.

I recall a song, though I don’t remember the name of the author, that beautifully encapsulates this idea. I’ll quote it in Punjabi and provide a translation:

“Panwain khey thay Anmole panwain kodian ch tole, Nanon hunjoo bun waggay tarri ishk kahani jay toun samjain taan moti jay na samjain taan pani.”

According to my understanding, the translation is: “You can say it’s priceless, or you can compare it with the dirt cheap. The story of your love flows out of my eyes like tears. If you understand it, it’s a pearl; if you don’t, it’s just water.”

My understanding is that we are cells in the body of God. We can individually imagine or think spiritual thoughts and bring them into physical reality. Although we seem small in the grand scheme of life, our abilities can move mountains. I metaphorically value each person at five dollars.

Humanity, as a physical expression of a spiritual God, means our spiritual expression would logically be God. Since we can’t function separately in body and spirit, we live through each other. If humanity disappears, no one would be there to understand or believe in God or do good deeds.

If you ask an Alzheimer’s patient about God, they might not respond because the knowledge has been wiped out by the disease. However, God is present in the people caring for these patients.

God is our understanding, usually instilled in us as we grow up, which can vary drastically from society to society. This knowledge is highly influenced by the politics of our sense of belonging to groups, which affects our religions.

Consider a baby born into a Muslim household but adopted by a Christian family, or a black baby raised by a white family. What is that child’s identity? Their status as a human being doesn’t change, but their sense of belonging does.

As a cell in the body, you are alive not because of personal efforts or will but because of the secure supply line for oxygen and nutrients. In return, you do your job to keep the body functioning. If the body is alive and functioning, you get what you need to live. If the body dies, so do the cells, and vice versa. God would still exist, but like a lily in the forest, unappreciated and without value.

You are directly connected to God, and God to you. Some may say you live only because of God, placing God on a high, supernatural pedestal. However, I believe that God is dependent on human physicality to be meaningful. Human actions, not those of God or the Devil, are what bring about good or bad in the physical world.

I won’t delve into the Devil’s side because I want to emphasize human importance. Look around and understand how God’s spiritual world depends on human physical input to bring spirituality into action.

You are so important that God’s work is incomplete without you. Middlemen preached spirituality-based knowledge like helping each other, but human insecurities and politics entered the spiritual world, making group politics more important than spiritual deeds. This led to religious wars and weakened humanity both physically and intellectually.

If people don’t attend religious places, they become like ghost towns. The value of God diminishes due to extremists whose political views, related to nationalism or religion, overshadow spirituality.

Middlemen, with their human insecurities, lost the spiritual focus by claiming exclusive access to God for their groups, hurting the true meaning of God. God is not only for a select group but for all humanity. I believe in taking responsibility for my actions and being the third equation. I judge every word I hear; if it is spiritual, I believe it; if it is political, I recognize it as politics, not spirituality.

Your life is your personal sheet of music. You can enjoy it as a melody or live a noisy, stressful life. It’s your choice, with your God-given free will and sense of justice. You can live scientifically with correct numbers or embrace a spiritual belief system that allows for emotions like love and deep happiness.

Humanity is like a body with different types of cells. Imagine a brain cell claiming to be the most important, while the heart, lungs, skin, liver, kidneys, and colon each argue their significance. God says, “I need you all to function so I can live in this chaotic but functioning body.” For God to be relevant, God needs a human body to live in, and for a human body to live, we need God inside. A building is meaningless without occupants, just like a dead body loses all identities.

You are directly connected to God, a metaphorical source, while you are a metaphorical cell. Both need each other to function. Middlemen disrupted humanity’s priorities and brought group politics, leading to religious wars. We have been killing God, one cell at a time. Politically tainted religions continue to cause harm.

We need to recognize the importance of each individual and move away from group politics. Favoring one group over another removes us from the spiritual world and makes us political beings.

You bring gifts from before birth, like free will and a personal sense of justice. Following group philosophies against personal justice is political, including religious beliefs.

You are responsible for your actions throughout your life. Work for the preservation of God’s body and yourself. If you feel unworthy, look at your connection to God and question your taught knowledge. If it contradicts your sense of justice, you are on the wrong path.

You must see God in yourself and others. If you can’t, it’s because of brainwashing. You are programmed to feel inferior for political purposes. Follow politics to find who benefits from your lack of self-belief.

Your life starts and finishes with a purpose: the reciprocal connection between you and the body. You are a subcontractor with free will and a job to do. This five dollars metaphor represents your worth and free will, making you the CEO of your life and a subcontractor to God.

As a CEO, appreciate your blessings and create balance in life. Avoid living to please or impress others, especially your belonging group. You might end up broken and dysfunctional, like a programmed warrior ant or worker bee.

Look at life as a mortal with limited time. Balance all areas of life for fulfillment. As a CEO, find your rhythm for a meaningful life. Respect the spaces in your life, representing God. Speak when it’s your turn, as silence doesn’t honor God’s purpose for humanity.

We bring spirituality into physical actions. We make God physically present. Recognize your importance in God’s work. Middlemen preached spirituality but became politically entangled. This led to religious wars and weakened God’s body, metaphorically.

Religions rely on rituals to control followers, but practical help to the weak and vulnerable is the true prayer to God. It is physical beings performing spiritual acts.

Now, if you don’t speak when it’s your turn, there will be complete silence, which I am absolutely against. Regardless of what some religions say, to me, God’s wisdom in having living, breathing humanity is to bring spirituality into physical actions. As human individuals, we hold a continuously evolving Godly nature, and our potential has no limits or caps. So, staying quiet is not a human thing to do. We are supposed to evolve and bring more strength to God, making God even mightier.

We are here for a reason: to transform a spiritual God into a God of physicality. If even God needs living, breathing individuals to fulfill other human beings’ prayers, then we, as individuals, should learn to respect and value ourselves.

As CEOs, responsibilities land on our shoulders individually. You can’t just go to a mosque or church and pray to fulfill the desire for bigger muscles, more money, or power. You have to take charge—join a gym, get a job, and put in personal effort to achieve whatever you want. God can easily say, “I gave you a functioning body, brain, and continuously evolving potential, so go use your free will to get what you desire.”

When you stand in front of the mirror, look through your eyes and connect with the person who lives inside. If for some reason you are not happy being there, you should personally know why. A functioning body and brain alone should be enough for you to be thankful. If you are not, you are looking at the shell and thinking with the installed data, which is biased. It means you have no idea about the power of the individual who lives inside you.

A nice, shiny car that doesn’t run is worse than a not-so-shiny but running one. Our behaviors usually stem from installed data, so growing beyond that data is a difficult task for the best of us. We form our opinions, but they are not truly ours, as they are influenced by the politics of our sense of belonging. A logical explanation would be appropriate here.

For example, if you are an atheist, you live life logically but fall in love and do some stupid things. You enjoy them, which makes you a hypocrite because love does not make any sense, yet you enjoy it. If God does not make any sense to you, how do you explain why so many people are able to enjoy God, just as you enjoy love? Taking it further, consider the placebo effect: scientifically, it does not make any sense, but it works for human beings. The power of imagination is real. Everything, including scientific discoveries, is the product of human imagination. If God resides in that area, it does not make God irrelevant. God is a pearl, not just a drop of water. If included properly, an individual can benefit tremendously, especially as a mortal.

Let’s even consider the darker side of addictions like alcohol, smoking, gambling, or hard drugs. You can’t be logical and addicted at the same time, yet many people live with thousands of excuses every day. Tell an addict to rationalize it, and they will say, “I am going to die anyway, so I have the right to enjoy whatever makes me feel good.”

Religions have taken an easy out by banning it all without explanation. It is regarded as a social problem, so it should be controlled by banning it. To me, this is an injustice against the individual by the masses. Sure, anything that causes an individual to be out of control is bad socially, but if the individual enjoys it, they have the right to live as they want to as a mortal. Remember, free will is given regardless of how an individual uses it. Even God is dependent on human choices.

You can choose not to believe in God or live your mortal years without enjoying emotions like love or the spiritual fulfillment and deep happiness of helping someone in need. You can selectively say you don’t believe in God, but remember your mortality, and whatever makes you feel good is your prerogative.

Enjoying love and addictions is just like believing in God. Choose something that fulfills you all around, not just the ego of being right yet still dying. It is not only personal and selfish living; our purpose in life is reciprocation. Since God, as a spiritual entity, may not need anything from you, your physicality is needed to fulfill the prayers of the weak and vulnerable.

How you look at God or believe, or don’t believe, is not the question. Your physicality is needed in the grand scheme of life.

You can pray for others like religious people do, but it is neither worthwhile nor practical for God. They are nothing but religious rituals, and most religions rely on these rituals to keep their followers in control. A majority of human beings are attracted to conforming practices for social purposes. It feels natural to follow because of a personal sense of belonging, but these practices are far from the real help that God admires in the human individual. Practical help to the weak and vulnerable is the real and useful prayer to God because a physical being is doing spiritual and Godly things.

POLITICAL FORESKIN.

      

It’s not about believing in God or not, but it’s all about you as an individual. Where do you stand or place yourself in the grand scheme of life? Personally, I believe that you have to respect yourself because, after all, you are a unique entity. Being an optimist, at least I believe so.

Remember, whether good or bad, nothing translates into physical actions without the input of human individuals. So, make sure you recognize that. If you believe in miracles, believe, but don’t bet on it, or worse, don’t harm an innocent fellow human being or risk your life by doing so.

A preacher of any religion can say it’s all God’s will, but logically, reality becomes quite murky when God has to use human individuals to manifest godly spirituality in physical form.

As a mass, our problem is our politics, which serves as a tool to control individuals. Yes, an individual is still weaker and more vulnerable compared to the mass, but the concept of equal human rights, which we understand in today’s world, has been reshaping our political landscape. Today, if a mosque or church building sits empty, who pays for its upkeep? God simply doesn’t foot the bill. God’s house is only valuable if there are human beings who use it.

Let’s view this as a means to become personally responsible for our own actions. It may sound blunt, but it makes sense to me. In this day and age, if you harbor prejudice and discriminate against someone based on their race, gender, political affiliations, or religious beliefs, you are engaging in prejudicial and discriminatory behavior. “Small thinking pinhead with a political foreskin” – whether or not you have foreskin – by discriminating and looking down upon others, you have forfeited your personal and individual identity as a decently evolved human being. Regardless of what you hide behind, you cannot conceal insecurity-driven prejudice and discrimination. Since your belonging groups have brainwashed you, you are unable to fully utilize the gifts bestowed upon you by God. Your real problem lies in the out-of-control politics of your group membership.

Growing up in a group, your sense of belonging is automatically influenced by the politics of that group. If that’s all you know because of your political allegiance, you may even believe that your group and your ancestors have been, are, and always will be right, while everyone else in the world is wrong. If that is the case, you can add ignorance to your prejudice and discrimination.

Remember, as we mature, we become responsible for our actions. When it comes to our nationalist and religious politics, we have stagnated instead of evolving because we are rewarded with praise for being mere followers. (Now the question arises: How can we metaphorically shed our “pinhead” status?)

First of all, personally and individually, we must acknowledge that being a pinhead is wrong for a thinking entity like a human being, even if it is the price we pay for belonging to any group, nation, or religion.

Secondly, with the God-given ability to think and choose, we must shed our political foreskin because we cannot alter facts by hiding and justifying our actions for the groups to which we belong.

Thirdly, individually, we must become the CEO of our own lives. Remember, as a human being, you have been blessed with an atom of autonomy-related free will, which brings personal responsibilities.

Fourthly, we should memorize and internalize the first rule of spirituality: “Do not do to anyone or anything that you would not want to be done to you or your loved ones.”

I hope this clarifies things for you. If not, start examining yourself spiritually, genetically, and scientifically. If that doesn’t work, start peeling away the layers of political identity imposed by your groups, one by one, to rediscover the long-lost decent human being within you. If that still doesn’t work, you may be a hopeless case of a political foreskin-wearing pinhead. Remember, ignorance may be useful in a political world, but it is not a blessing in the real spiritual world.

I am not trying to plant doubts in people’s minds about the existence of God. Quite the contrary, I want everyone to take individual responsibility for being human. I aim to raise awareness of what we are made of and our potential standing. My intention is for each of us to take control of our lives and become the CEO of our own lives. No group should exploit its followers to advance its political agendas, especially if they are extreme and endanger innocent lives.

As individuals, we must all take responsibility for our actions because, as we come into this world, we bring gifts from before birth. Alongside the genetics of a mortal human being, we bring compassion and love, along with an atom of autonomy-related free will to choose. Opting to be a pinhead instead and being proud of it is absurd for a free-will-using entity like a human being.

Once you have your free will, it is yours to keep. You can use it to live as you wish, even if our parents, society, nations, and religions want us to live according to their political agendas. Whether you listen and lose your happiness or refuse to listen and lose your freedom, losing happiness or even life is a significant problem. Individuals must survive, so personal politics are in order as well. If your personal insecurities are forcing you to become weak, remember, a weakling is a weakling, whether you have a political foreskin or not. Now, what word should be used for a group of pinheads? I have never encountered this kind of writing, so I am unable to find a word for them. How about simply prejudicial and discriminatory pinheads?

The gift of free will can either help us or harm us individually, and my focus is on giving individuals personal strength. Thus, my focus is not on us as groups because, to me, if a person chooses a wrong path, it is a choice, and the consequences rest on the individual’s shoulders.

You can choose to wear religious clothing, grow a beard or wear a turban. You can cut or grow your hair or wear a robe with a cross. None of these things will make you a better person unless you possess good personal character. It is your actions that determine where you stand in the spiritual world. Remember, we as individuals empower our belief systems, such as religions, to turn even educated people into prejudiced and discriminatory individuals, to the extent that it instills passion to be proudly ignorant. This is exactly the opposite of what spirituality teaches. If you wish to stand up for God and spirituality, do so, but do not intermingle group politics. It is a matter strictly between God and the individual human, and the good deeds of the individual human are their reciprocal response for being alive. Spirituality is not a political platform for launching wars over power and control. Do not be a pinhead, especially in the name of God. If a religion preaches prejudice and discrimination, it is a political system. Now, find me a religion that is purely spiritual; I bet you would have a hard time finding one. You will find many pinheads committing spiritual crimes in the name of their belonging groups’ politics, which are purely religious and nationalistic.

Logically, you cannot punish someone if their actions do not harm anyone. You can ban alcohol, smoking pot, or homosexual relations, but these laws are shaky ground not only because they are practically unenforceable but also because they can be challenged in a court of equal human rights. If two people have an unconventional relationship, it is their right to live as they wish, as long as they do not drive while intoxicated or high and endanger others. The birth of equal human rights is related to the principle of not doing to others what you would not want done to you or your loved ones. If God gave us the freedom to choose by blessing us with free will, then who gave others the power to violate someone else’s human rights? If someone is willing to grant you the freedom to choose, why interfere and rob someone else of that same freedom?

Do not disparage your children or others if they do not wish to pray, as that may be your personal way of reciprocating, but remember, it is not entirely certain. However, working and assisting others, even if you are practically compensated for doing so, is reciprocation on a more assured scale. (Read Love Triangle.) Your children are your instinctive love, and adhering to the rules of your belonging groups is your universal love, so it is your duty to strike a balance rather than favor one over the other. Losing your children over what your belonging group thinks is a clear sign of an imbalanced human being.

Putting lipstick on a pig does not change the fact that being a religious individual does not guarantee possessing good character; just look around. Concealing your character behind thick walls does not alter the core of problematic behavior. I know I am not being politically correct by stating things as they are. People from all walks of life have been embroiled in all sorts of scandals, from money laundering to sexual crimes. These are universally recognized facts concerning organized religions.

Personally, I do not buy into everything I am sold, so whatever happens to me after I die will be my responsibility. I strive to live life as a mortal with free will and a duty to reciprocate for others, as bestowed by God. I believe in practical prayers over regular prayers. If you consider yourself a practical soldier of God, you should not fear life after death, because your living years are more meaningful than you have been taught.

Balancing living years with personal and individual rights with God through the duty of reciprocation is as spiritual as it can get. Remember, it’s your practical prayers that matter the most; everything else is simply the politics of belonging and conforming to rituals.

The way you worship or dress is highly dependent on where you are from or belong. Your traditions, customs, and societal rules dictate how you live with a sense of belonging, but the essence of spirituality keeps us all aligned with universal goodness. One can be an atheist and still be spiritually aware; no one should have the power to judge who is going to heaven or hell because certainty in this regard diminishes our evolved humanity.

I don’t believe in self-mutilation or any form of self-harm, including extreme asceticism, because I believe God needs human beings to have functioning bodies to reciprocate practically. For an individual, having a regular job, usually involving helping others, is a form of reciprocation. Giving aid while working should be seen as more beneficial than receiving it. Choosing how to reciprocate is crucial; practicality should be at the core of your actions. Praying, worshiping, fasting, or self-harm may cross into areas of religious devotion, but they do not necessarily serve practical help to others. God requires practical assistance from human individuals throughout the day, something no amount of prayer can match. Would you prefer your children to pray or to actively reciprocate by helping those in need? This form of practical reciprocation is universal and spiritual; it transcends religious beliefs or national customs, embodying compassion from God through human individuals.

That’s why God exists in all human societies, regardless of religion. If you appreciate the gift of free oxygen and a functioning body, you are inclined to reciprocate. Since reciprocation is spiritual and personal, it exists directly between God and the human individual. Wherever a human being performs a good deed, God is present, and no religious rituals, traditions, or customs are necessary to be spiritual.

Wearing a beard, turban, cross, niqab, hijab, or any other religious symbol does not inherently make you a good person, especially if you believe yourself superior to others based solely on your group affiliation, prayers, or fasting. Understanding spirituality makes one humble and allows recognition of God in all people, regardless of their belief system. Even contemplating prejudice and discrimination against innocent beings removes one from the spiritual realm and places them in a political one.

If you belong to a minority group and face discrimination but still believe yourself superior to all others worldwide, you find yourself in a spiritual and political quandary from both perspectives.

Our spiritual knowledge should make us better for both God and humanity, leading to contentment within ourselves. However, our religious knowledge and differences have not benefited humanity over thousands of years; in fact, they have often led to passionate destruction. Our evolution should assist us, but the politics of belonging have often hindered this progress. Therefore, it is our duty to evolve spiritually just as we have in other areas of life.

As humanity, we must strive to remove politics from our religious beliefs. Each of us must ensure that our religions are purely spiritual. By subjecting our governance to equal justice systems for all humanity, we can remove power from religious leaders and their extremist followers while promoting equal human rights. This approach not only eradicates prejudice and discrimination from humanity but also ensures equal justice for all. Humanity can exist without religions, but it cannot thrive without spiritually grounded justice.

The problem with religion lies in its tendency to promote the belief that if I follow the rules, so should everyone else, with punishment for non-conformity or inferiority. This mindset fosters prejudice and discrimination across all religions because political religions have created situations where followers feel superior simply for adhering to religious rules, regardless of their political or spiritual nature.

Let’s change these rules to foster further evolution. Humanity must embrace a new paradigm to unite, or we risk spending thousands more years realizing that group politics cannot guide us where humanity needs to be. Claiming complete knowledge is akin to ignorance, whether it’s asserting total understanding of space or asserting everything is the work of God. Despite our level of civilization, we have yet to fully harness our brain’s potential. Believing our knowledge is complete, regardless of comprehension or understanding of life’s complexity, borders on ignorance. Sooner or later, assumptions based on assumed knowledge can lead to radicalism or outright irrationality.

Our knowledge has never been, is not, and will never be complete due to our evolutionary nature. As we learn more, our brains continue to produce and grow more neurons, indicating limitless potential. Like space, human knowledge is incomprehensible, and even our bodies evolve, as seen in the standards of athletic performance, particularly among bodybuilders, who continuously push boundaries.

Whether in medicine, science, technology, social sciences, political governance, or religion, we must always leave room for our evolving nature. Plainly put, we do not know everything, and believing otherwise is ignorance.

Being born of a certain race, color, gender, nation, or faith logically and factually does not diminish our humanity. Genetically and scientifically speaking, our intrinsic nature as human beings remains unchanged. Anyone penalizing another for these attributes, or anyone doing so themselves, exemplifies how our political agendas perpetuate ignorance.

Penalizing an innocent person has always been, is currently, and will forever be spiritually wrong. Regardless of religion or nationalism, prejudice and discrimination stem from ignorance, not education. If you harbor prejudiced or discriminatory beliefs, grounding yourself in basic spiritual principles can guide your sense of justice and commitment to equal human rights: treat others as you would want to be treated.

Prejudice and discrimination are learned behaviors. Consider interactions among infants to understand how we absorb teachings from our environment and social circumstances. Our belonging groups and life experiences shape us, exploiting individual insecurities and vulnerabilities. Not everyone is the CEO of their life, aware of the political manipulation behind societal norms. Whether individually or collectively, we often blindly follow, stoking political fires of belonging without spiritual wisdom guiding our actions.

Even if we overcome group politics, we find new avenues for discrimination, from racial and gender biases to biases based on weight, age, illness, or addiction. We are products of our societies, our behaviors programmed politically.

Undoing this deeply ingrained, inherited knowledge will not be easy. Top-down approaches rarely effect lasting change, as belonging groups are inherently political entities reluctant to relinquish control.

To gauge your own prejudices honestly, ask yourself: Do you expect everyone to adhere to your group’s rules or follow your faith? Do you blame obese individuals for their condition? Does your educational attainment make you superior to others as an individual? Winning a sports event may boost your ego, but does it make you superior to those you defeated in all aspects of life?

The same applies to job titles or money. Do you feel superior to those less fortunate? Looks, body, status, nationality, gender, color, or religious beliefs—everything in between—may boost your self-esteem, but it’s all data-driven. The reality is, you are much more than mere data. No human being is inherently superior to another just because of data. Another living, breathing human being is not lesser due to our spiritual awareness. You may be in a better position physically and mentally, but spiritually, we cannot be different; we are all simply cells of God’s body, aiding in His function.

Remember, like everyone else, you need oxygen to breathe, food and water to survive. You get sick, grow old, and pass away, replaced just like our cells. So what makes you any different? If you still think you’re better than others, you must grasp mortality before it’s too late, as you may have the chance to become a spiritual being.

If you don’t understand, you need to comprehend the meanings and purposes of your life in the years you live. Take charge and become the CEO of your life—that’s what you were created for, and what you will always be. Your education in material and physical living is only half-knowledge; thoughts of superiority often stem from, and are related to, an inferiority complex.

If you believe you become a better person by adhering to the rules of your group, it has nothing to do with spirituality. Even if it’s related to your religion, if it lacks spirituality, it’s purely political. As a CEO, it’s your duty to discern these differences.

Extreme behaviors like becoming suicide bombers or attacking places of worship stem from the choices you make. If you were a CEO, you would consider the innocence of those you harm before acting on beliefs instilled by others. Remember, we’re not toy soldiers; we possess the ability to think independently and function physically on our own. As human beings, we are autonomous atoms blessed with free will, making us solely responsible for our actions. Choosing extremism is a personal and individual responsibility. If you’re an adult acting on extreme beliefs, and robbing someone of their love due to your learned knowledge, ask yourself: “Would it hurt me if someone robbed me of love?” If the answer is yes, take this message to heart—it’s a spiritual crime. You must believe this and accept your responsibilities. Always prioritize spirituality over religious mandates, and humanity over group politics.

Personal identity has always been yours, but letting others strip it away reduces you to a warrior ant, a worker bee, or a human toy soldier. Last I checked, human beings were meant to be intellectually and genetically superior beings compared to ants and bees. Yet today, our groups of human beings aren’t faring much better than ants or bees.

We all have the potential to become CEOs of our own lives, but our sense of belonging to groups often reduces us to the point where questioning those groups becomes unthinkable. Why do we commit spiritual crimes in the name of our groups? Ironically, we’ve been sold a false sense of security. Our genetics and mortal nature contradict this, as no group can truly safeguard us from death and disease. Just look around, and you’ll see for yourself. As human beings, our mortality is an undeniable fact, irrespective of what we’ve been taught. If you’re assured of safety from an enemy, ask: which enemy is being discussed? Is it the enemy of the group, or the enemy within the group? Consider local crime rates—criminals come in all colors, races, genders, nations, and religions.

Following rules showcases discipline, but let’s examine human societies: most breakthrough discoveries stem from trailblazers and rule breakers. Believing that staying within boundaries makes you a better person is entirely false. If you’re told you’ll reach heaven by adhering to political rules set by a group of people, you must separate spirituality from politics. If you can’t, refrain from committing spiritual crimes in the name of your group—even if it’s for religion or God, especially when religion demands a crime.

Our issue lies in being taught or forced to adhere strictly to traditional, customary, and religious knowledge. This is acceptable as long as it’s based on spirituality, but conflicts arise when these beliefs lead to discord. When our sense of belonging to a group takes precedence, and we begin committing spiritual crimes against others, justifying them as something other than spiritual offenses, whether political or not, our actions derive from free will. Therefore, every human individual is accountable for their actions.

If a devout follower strives for good but teaches others that those who don’t follow are wrong or bad, they are actively promoting prejudice and discrimination. Find me a group that’s innocent in this regard. Our race and even our genders advocate that staying with them is advantageous. Our nations advocate nationalism, while our religions preach the politics of belonging overtly. Despite this, the world desires peace—good luck achieving that. Until we shift our sense of belonging toward universal humanity and equal human rights for all, world peace will remain elusive. If you desire global peace, eradicate prejudice and discrimination from your religions and nationalism. We can achieve this, one household at a time, starting with ourselves.

In today’s era of space stations and the internet, you can’t have your cake and eat it too. If you desire metaphorical walls, you must face the realities of today’s evolution. Internet-based commerce continues to expand, and regardless of nationality, race, or religion, most people seek advantageous deals. In the past, one didn’t know the prices in the next town, let alone another country. Today, everything is online, and we’re aware of happenings worldwide. If we halt imports, people will purchase online even if they pay more for locally produced goods—it’s that simple. Today, humanity resembles a small village, especially in information technology.

Anything controlling can be deemed oppressive, especially when it encroaches on freedom—people will inevitably resist. If you seek something in your country and it’s priced higher than elsewhere, the entire world will know in no time. Humanity must evolve to keep pace with these changes. If a political leader enacts a ban and compels you to pay more than others, that leader won’t last long, as today’s politicians understand this. Illegal smuggling and black-market activities become rampant, more harmful than allowing a bit more freedom.

Our antiquated governance systems are failing us. Spiritually, religions have let us down by allowing the politics of belonging to dictate. Mixing black and white creates brown, mixing brown and yellow, or any other combination, creates a diverse and vibrant humanity. Clinging to the past restricts growth and may label you a bigot, prejudiced, or discriminatory individual.

Consider Brexit and the Mexican border wall. How challenging things have become compared to fifty years ago—back then, even those who oppose would likely have supported such measures. Today, changes occur so swiftly that our evolution must keep pace. All signs point to humanity’s struggle to work together: extreme weather from global warming, rapid internet-driven trade and travel that can spread infections faster than ever. Just look at us now—everyone confined at home because the Great Wall of China couldn’t contain the coronavirus.

To survive as nations, we must help each other survive—as friends, as one organism, as humanity—for our mutual benefit. All could vanish if we act foolishly and unleash nuclear weapons upon each other.

If we continue to spiritually support each other, we will grow stronger by working together. The Great Wall of China cannot shield us from global warming or nuclear disaster. We face bigger challenges, and some countries erect walls to deter migration, yet the true threats transcend these barriers.

Oil companies ought to invest in building water pipelines alongside oil pipelines as a humanitarian gesture to sustain lives and livelihoods in their native lands. Conservative political styles or parties will struggle to survive as the political landscape shifts. They already find it difficult to maintain purely conservative stances. What will happen when their own supporters fall victim to issues linked to global warming? Will they be ants, bees, toy soldiers, or simply “PIN HEADS,” or will they evolve into humane CEOs who comprehend the complexities of political foresight?

HOPE AND OPTIMISM FOR HAPPINESS AND CONTENTMENT.

“An awareness of mortality has the potential to rob us of happiness and contentment, but fortunately, we are equipped or blessed with hope and optimism from before birth. Life is worth living because of hope and optimism.”

Hope and optimism sound appealing, but like our ego, they have their sides. They both share the characteristic of being double-edged swords. For instance, hoping that God will bring positive things to you is great. However, if you cease putting effort into your life, neglect responsibilities, or worse, gamble with every action, trouble can ensue, and God may be unfairly blamed for not intervening. While blind faith is comforting for some, blindly trusting is rare. For most of us, aligning our actions is essential.

In this day and age, we must take ownership of our actions. Regardless of what you’ve been taught, relying solely on religious faith is insufficient. We must take physical charge and assume the role of CEO in our mortal lives. Striking a balance between faith and personal responsibility is vital. When consulting a mullah or priest, they may advise you to have faith in God, suggesting that God can handle everything. However, ask them how God operates without human beings. Every good deed requires physical action, and God relies on humans in that regard. Caring for the weak and vulnerable requires the involvement of strong, capable, living, breathing human beings. If you claim that God alone or spirituality accomplishes this, consider that without human hands, backs, or shoulders, all grand religious structures—mosques, churches, temples—would crumble and be reduced to rubble.

To live a successful mortal life, we must learn not to obstruct our own potential. Our potential won’t just manifest on its own; we must exert effort to realize it. You can’t attend a mosque or church and pray for bigger muscles or better health. You must proactively hit the gym and take steps to improve your physicality. Similarly, if you seek spiritual growth, attending places of worship isn’t enough; you must delve into the depths of humanity, even amidst its challenges and complexities, where broken people reside—because that is where God resides. If you believe God resides in buildings, reconsider; remove people from those buildings, and they would likely be sold for a dollar (Read: God’s house for sale, one dollar).

Our continuously evolving potential awaits personal action to evolve so that each one of us can individually contribute to humanity. However, we often adhere to the politics of group affiliation, even to the point of taking lives, without questioning why. To me, this is purely political, whether it is masked behind religious beliefs or nationalism. It’s akin to putting lipstick on a pig. The reality is bitter; we must eventually acknowledge this and change for the better, as our past and present methods have not served humanity well. We, as humanity, have a responsibility to collaborate and seek solutions before we bring about the demise of our planet.

Nationalism, religious beliefs aside, our lives and years of life are meant for human spirituality and God. If you’ve been taught otherwise or believe so, snap out of it and smell the roses. Global warming-related problems loom, and security walls won’t suffice. Our weapons of mass destruction are similarly situated; no wall can contain the resulting radiation. Therefore, humanity must collaborate rather than employ antiquated political tactics that seek to empower one group to dominate the world. Such politics could have deadly consequences because we no longer engage in combat with swords and shields.

A consistent and undeniable facet of human knowledge is our continuous evolution. Given our diverse fields of knowledge and individual responsibilities to evolve in each area, it is clear that we are each created as the CEO of our lives. We cannot evolve in one area and neglect others; an imbalanced individual is prone to becoming an extremist, prejudiced, discriminatory, and politically ignorant. Religious leaders often avoid exploring the realm of God and spirituality according to the contemporary needs of individual and collective evolution in other spheres of life because if they lose control, they lose power. In contrast, spirituality is unconcerned with power and control; its sole purpose is to assist the needy. So, if you still believe your religion embodies spirituality, examine whether it preaches power and control, then decide. This is especially pertinent for CEOs who can question religious authorities.

Our various life domains include physical health, psychological, mental, emotional, and spiritual health on one side, and science, technology, and everything in between on the other. When a scientist makes a discovery, it can easily undermine other forms of knowledge, which is limiting. Adopting a singular approach to living a mortal life is inadequate for a fulfilling human experience. Focusing exclusively on intellectual pursuits while neglecting emotional fulfillment and contentment is plausible. Likewise, endorsing solely scientific life is akin to advocating for exclusively religious life; both can lead to extremism. Both have the potential to cause us to overlook the deep-seated happiness in our mortal lives associated with spirituality, which is a significant loss depending on how we perceive our mortality.

Whether you are an atheist scientist, engineer, or doctor, you may not excel in aiding physically ill people. Conversely, if you are a mullah, priest, or rabbi, you may not possess expertise in social work or politics. Preaching religion does not necessarily equate to spirituality; if you exhibit prejudice or discrimination towards others while promoting your particular religion, you may be far removed from true spirituality. Spirituality revolves around viewing all of humanity as a single organism, offering equal justice to every constituent; it does not favor specific groups or cells, just as a body considers every part—whether an arm or a leg.

Every human society has required, requires, and will continue to require a justice system. However, as always, it is subject to the politics of group affiliation. Justice systems may be intricate, but removing political influence can eliminate many complexities. Today’s widespread pursuit of equal human rights is no mere coincidence; it has been fermenting for a considerable period. Every other experiment in human sociology has been conducted under the auspices of group affiliation politics, characterized by injustice, prejudice, and discrimination. These endeavors have failed humanity. Humanity requires a system grounded in equal justice. Individuals are prepared to discard prejudice and discrimination if the regulations apply equally to everyone. However, we then confront the issue of discrimination by the mass against individuals. To resolve this, we must consider the mass as a single individual, much like how we treat corporations.

Since mass has always been more powerful compared to the individual, it tends to flex its muscles and commit injustice against individuals. For instance, when we go to war as a mass, it is individuals who kill and are killed. When many people follow this kind of politics, they interfere with the spiritual justice system, which cannot be blind due to political influences. Therefore, most societies, nations, and religions should be viewed as corporations so that individuals can take them to court if necessary.

Most religions have a lot of followers, as do communism and socialism, making them larger corporations and political entities. We all follow them because of our individual insecurities; we seek to fit in, impress, and be admired by our belonging groups, stoking that political fire regardless of our level of intellect. Without spirituality and justices systems in our societies, we have been and continue to commit spiritual crimes against each other, often in the name of God or powerful people. Look around and see how many spiritual crimes are committed daily against innocent individuals in the name of nationalism, religion, and even God.

Recently, I watched a movie called “An Interview with God.” One line stuck in my head: God telling the individual, “Your life is not an audition for the afterlife. If you can stop worrying about that, you might have time for other things like loving one another and living your life.”

When religions mix politics or play with power and control in their disguised spiritual path, they become political systems. A political religion will always be about power and control. For God, it is not about power and control; it is about spirituality and justice for all equally. Critically examine every religion, and you will find that most openly preach that their way is the only way to God and that everyone else is going to hell. Hell no.

The biggest spiritual wrong is that political religions connect their group prejudice, discrimination, and injustice to God, as if God is unable to do justice. They do it themselves but cannot keep their politics of belonging out. These political religions or their extremist followers commit wrongs against innocent people in the name of God. The kicker is that God takes the blame from the victim’s side as well, with people asking why God let that happen to them. These problems are cunningly created by our political religions, placing God in such a position that we individually expect perfection from God. If God does not show up to help, all the blame goes to God, not to the human individuals involved in the bad actions. This is as political as it gets, a cunning ploy from humans who do not take responsibility for their actions and instead place the blame on God or the Devil.

When bad things happen to good people, the Devil gets the blame. My problem with that is, why don’t human beings take their responsibilities and stop placing everything on God and the Devil? (This reasoning is why I titled my writing “Who Flipped My Triangle”). If God were to respond, “I gave you a functioning body, brain, oxygen, and free will. What more do you want? Should I hold your hand all the time so you can’t follow your nature and evolve? I did my job; now you do yours. Use your abilities, take charge, own your actions, and evolve.”

Now look around and see how our political religions have stood in the way of our evolution. They have progressed from throwing virgins off cliffs to please God to wanting us to run around fearfully, adhering to politically preached so-called security. Today, we have figured out and are continuing to figure out many things that religious fanatics never expected to be debunked.

From medical advances, including reproduction and genetic interventions, to space exploration and scientific discoveries, we see the spectrum of human capability. On the other hand, we also have weapons of mass destruction. Should we blame the Devil or give all the credit to God for everything human beings do? Remember, today we have satellites in space, yet we still argue about the moon to adjust our Eid holiday.

One might say God or the Devil don’t exist, an easy assumption. But if you look within the core of human beings, you will discover two sides: good and bad, chosen by us through free will. You can choose to nurture one or the other, but at the end of the day, it is you who gives physicality to the good or dirty deeds of God and the Devil.

If you, with your evolving yet limited knowledge, choose to believe only in yourself and deny the existence of God and the Devil, you could be right because this is your free will, which feeds your good and bad. In other words, you give physicality to your actions through the choices you make with your God-given free will. It’s your responsibility to choose your actions wisely because you are the one making the choices.

We, as individuals, have far more responsibilities than we are taught to believe. First of all, ask why most religions promote living this life for the afterlife. According to them, this life is less important—ask them why. Before you go any further, remember we are only useful to God with our physicality, meaning only in our living years. If we are spirits or dead, we cannot help anyone physically. Our physical deeds are God’s help to the seekers. Why have we been preached that the afterlife is superior to our living years? Since no one comes back with physical evidence, religious leaders might be taking advantage of that, telling you to follow or else God will punish you with Hell. That pops another question: why do we have to believe blindly in everything a political religion says?

The problem is that following passed-down knowledge unquestionably goes against our human nature. If we are threatened with being shunned, physically punished, or even killed, that may temporarily delay the questioning, but the doubts will not be resolved. If you live in Western nations, these threats may not mean anything to you. But in the real world, these spiritual crimes are committed in broad daylight by extremists everywhere, and not in any one particular religion. It is a political phenomenon that crosses over different religions and other ways of governing, often in the name of religion or nationalism. Just like mob killings have no particular religion, they have the same passionate foundation based on the politics of belonging.

Regardless of free will, if you are not happy with all the blessings, how can you be happy without the physical blessings of the body? If you start to dig into your lack of fulfillment and question the motives behind all the rules or traditions of your governing systems, you will eventually recognize the politics of power and control for some people, not God and the Devil. Does that mean I don’t believe in any one particular religion or God and the Devil? It’s not a simple question for me. It is so broad that if I try to simplify, I would end up in an assumption world where everything becomes murky, and our ego kicks in, making us claim we know everything there is to know. I am a student of practical life with logic; if something doesn’t make sense, I will question it regardless of how many people believe in it. No ego, just a questioning nature. I believe in individual freedom, equal human rights, and the responsibility to reciprocate for God’s blessings like free will, a functioning body, a thinking brain, and free oxygen. If I can’t function even for a few minutes on my own, that is enough to humble me about my knowledge in the grand scheme of life. Anyway, that’s me thinking out loud. Let’s get back to the blog post.

With the politics of belonging to our groups in mind, the mass over the individual may seem like a good idea, but to me, it must be equal justice for all, regardless of who they are. No one is above the law—not an individual, a group of people, a nation, or a religion. Whether it is between groups or between an individual and a group, it must be equal justice. If it is not based on equal justice, it is not based on spirituality. We need to purge our religious beliefs of political influences because we are overly passionate about our belief systems. Our past history shows that religious wars are the bloodiest because of our passion. Even today, a religious fanatic might not hesitate to use a weapon of mass destruction because they believe the afterlife is more important than the present life. If it is not based on justice and spirituality, it must be political. So politically, how do we make our governing systems follow blind and equal justice?

Let’s start by recognizing and removing group politics, then help individuals find their footing to become CEOs of their lives, and make sense of it all by using the common sense of mortality, God, spirituality, and politics.

Ask yourself if God is a figure, then ask yourself what we really are. What does it mean to have our own individual free will? Does this free will make us tiny gods? Heaven forbid I should use this term; it may get me thrown out of God’s so-called political world. We can’t be God if politics takes over our religious or spiritual beliefs. Political logic can easily say that no mass of people would like individuals running around disputing or debunking every theory presented to them. So there is no doubt about politically tainted rituals, traditions, and rules. How can an individual stand up against mass-related injustices? One might say that is just the way it is, but I disagree. For humanity, maintaining the status quo is not the way it is because we are always evolving.

Individually, if it is a matter of life and death, the individual should use personal politics to survive in hostile situations. Interestingly, in this modern age, our religious beliefs have been questioned and labeled as discriminatory and prejudicial systems of governing. It is a clear sign that spirituality based on equal human rights is in vogue. If you, as an individual, start to live with principles of equality and refrain from doing to others what you wouldn’t like done to you or your loved ones, you will automatically have spirituality in your actions, regardless of your religion or belief system.

If you have arrived here, you have become the CEO of your life—a tiny god who cares and does not emphasize the fear of hell, has no greed for heaven, and makes living years more important than life after death. You follow God’s true orders of reciprocation and enjoy all the happy moments along the way instead of hoping to be forgiven or praying out of fear of God while committing spiritual crimes in the name of religion.

Now, let us set politics aside and look at things a little deeper with a different kind of knowledge.

My question is: Why are some people, even as kids, much more optimistic than others, while some of us are never happy to be alive, let alone happy for the little moments that make a mortal life worth living? If life is worth living, what are the things that make that happen? The things that make people happy are not even things. For instance, happy people love to be with others, enjoy friendships, and are positive about life regardless of circumstances. Why are some of us miserable regardless of having a materially successful life? If material success is not enough, what would make them happier? Is it control? Is it security, or both? Is it genetics or education? What makes everyone different? It can’t be learned knowledge because if that were true, most of us would be happy because we have been learning from our gurus and experts of all sorts for a long, long time, and by now, we should be wise enough to be happy.

We have people who know a lot about our brain physiology and psychology or even drugs, and on the other side, we have several religions, their sects, and a whole lot of other manifestos of life. We have been around for a long time, so our knowledge should be at a high level to live a happy life, especially if we know about our mortality. Regardless of our temporary visit, why aren’t we happy, or at least why don’t we value happiness as the ultimate prize of being mortal, who is not in any way, shape, or form in control or secure with personal will?

There are some factual realities for each and every one of us, like age, sickness, and mortality, so fearing, stressing, or trying to control them can actually work against the very goal of achieving happiness and contentment. It’s okay to be sick, weak, or vulnerable sometimes because these events, circumstances, or situations are part of what makes a life visit a life.

If you get all bent out of shape every time you lose control, remember you are lacking hope and optimism because all circumstances, situations, or events, whether physical, emotional, or financial, change all the time. If you go through some difficult times, just look back at how many times you have gotten out of these physical, emotional, financial, and spiritual problems. Logically, it should give you hope and help you get out of a difficult time, but it is not so easy for a certain type of person. You can say whatever you want, regardless of how much it makes sense to them; they just can’t or will not be able to put it into practice because they simply want life to be without any problems, meaning total control over everything. For a mortal being, there is no control and security, so wasting time, energy, and good health over it is not wise. You need to find a way to go deep into the pit where these two reside, come to terms with them, and surrender them. If no one out there lives a life of an immortal, even the strongest can’t live life in total control, then what is driving you to want that control? Ask yourself this question honestly in the dead of night; if you want answers, they are within your pit or gut.

Our hope and optimism could be related to our education from parents or the society we belong to, or simply something we brought along from before birth. For instance, we have our social knowledge written in the books and actions of our belonging groups, but there is a lot more to it, and to learn more, you will have to read between those lines as well.

From the get-go, you have been told, “Don’t do this, do that; this is the right thing to do, and that is wrong,” and that right and wrong have a lot more written in between as well, which you learn as you grow up. Learning to be good or bad is one thing, but what we learn from in between the lines is just as important as what is written in the lines. In a nutshell, when we are taught dos or don’ts, we are actually taught to control everything in life. Indirectly but unfortunately, that is the game of life we need to play to be civilized human beings. Our inhibitions are what make us different, better, or superior to other creatures and whatever is established in the world. We have pulled ourselves off the food list of other creatures, and we have assumed our CEO status. We self-regulate ourselves; it may not be perfect, but we don’t need a police officer for every individual.

In reality, if you are taught control by everything and everybody around you while you are growing up, it’s going to be very hard to undo and work against that knowledge when you are grown up. As the saying goes, if the trunk of the tree is green, you can bend it; after that, forget about it, it will break but not bend. It is important and crucial for society to talk to their young school-age population about control and related problems as they start to understand life.

We are teaching them everything is in their control; you can be whatever you want to be. Sure, you can inspire them to push themselves to become whatever they want to be, but their happiness and contentment matter to them more than your desire to live through them.

In today’s Western societies, stress and anxiety are topping the charts, especially in growing kids, because every negative event makes them rob their own happiness. They can’t even think about their life without control, so control-related stress can be in the foundation of their mental health and related issues. Regardless of our help-related inventions or interventions, our problems are still growing. Personally, I feel that if you lack hope and optimism, you would hate to be in a difficult situation, so every negative situation would make you feel stuck in it forever, regardless of how many times you have gone through tough experiences and come out. If looking back is not reassuring, it is related to the desire to have a perfectly controlled life, and unfortunately, as human beings, we are mortal, so the dream of a perfectly controlled life is a wrong education provided to our young ones.

These days, if you look around in Western nations, you will see a lot of people going to yoga classes as grown-ups. Ever wonder why they feel better or why they need to follow these thousands-of-years-old practices? Why, even in this day and age, can’t we come up with new things or scientific interventions for our stress management? Religion or not, resorting to age-old strategies must have some kind of benefit; otherwise, today’s societies are always looking for quick fixes like drugs. A scientist would like to know all the numbers of math to live a life of control, but as a mortal, our numbers don’t add up as we age. If two plus two is four, as we age, it is not four anymore; personally, I would take three point nine any day, but our perfectly controlled life knowledge wants you to keep looking for that penny until you find it. GOOD LUCK WITH THAT.

Happiness and contentment should be our top priority, or at least we should seek out these real treasures because we are aware of our mortal nature. We all seek happiness and contentment, but by seeking security and control in all areas of our mortal lives. It just does not make any sense because our desire for security and control is the main thing that actually helps us literally rob ourselves of happiness and contentment. Kind of twisted logic because we want to accumulate happiness and contentment, yet security-related control causes us extreme stress and related health problems.

We think that when we secure ourselves, we will be happy and content. Unfortunately, there is no security and control for a mortal being because, first of all, we don’t have control over the supply of oxygen; second, even after we breathe in that oxygen, we still don’t have control over what goes on inside the body. With ten trillion cells and a hundred trillion good and bad bacteria, it is a miracle for us to be alive. Since we all fall into that category, that makes mortality a fact-based reality that we personally can’t change, so it is better to accept, adopt, and add or accumulate as many happy moments as possible.

If you still think, “It’s not going to happen to me,” you are simply closing your eyes and burying your head in the sand. Our actions speak for themselves because we try our best to secure ourselves financially so we can be happy. We run after and seek love and health simply because we want to be happy and content in our living years.

Our hatred of being sick, weak, and vulnerable makes us control our finances, health, and love. Losing them can and will leave us spiritually, physically, emotionally, and psychologically destroyed unless we have hope and optimism. Since these two belong to your spiritual health, it is a good idea to learn about spirituality before religion, psychology, and science. If you start to dissect and seek solutions for individuals’ problems, especially when they are related to happiness and contentment, you will end up with what I call pit problems, a desire to control related to personal insecurities.

Insecurity and control are related to our in-between-the-lines knowledge. Awareness of mortality makes us secure ourselves, and this security gives birth to our control and control-related health issues.

I believe that in order to seek hope and optimism, we have to dig deep in our gut or pit, undo and work against our education in between the lines of the knowledge of control provided to us by our parents, societies, or our own selves.

We are teaching children that everything is within their control and that they can be whatever they want to be. Sure, you can inspire them to push themselves to become whatever they desire, but their happiness and contentment matter more than your desire to live through them.

In today’s Western societies, stress and anxiety are topping the charts, especially among growing children, because every negative event robs them of their own happiness. They can’t even imagine their lives without control, so control-related stress can form the foundation of their mental health issues. Despite our numerous inventions and interventions aimed at helping, our problems are still growing. Personally, I feel that if you lack hope and optimism, you will hate being in difficult situations, so every negative situation will make you feel stuck forever, regardless of how many tough experiences you have overcome. If looking back is not reassuring, it is related to the desire for a perfectly controlled life. Unfortunately, as human beings, we are mortal, so the dream of a perfectly controlled life is a misguided education provided to our young ones.

These days, if you look around in Western nations, you will see many people attending yoga classes as adults. Ever wonder why they feel better or why they need to follow these thousands-of-years-old practices? Why, even in this day and age, can’t we come up with new methods or scientific interventions for stress management? Religion or not, resorting to age-old strategies must have some benefits; otherwise, today’s societies would always be looking for quick fixes like drugs. A scientist would like to know all the numbers of math to live a life of control, but as mortals, our numbers don’t add up as we age. If two plus two equals four, as we age, it is not four anymore. Personally, I would take three-point-nine any day, but our perfectly controlled life knowledge wants you to keep looking for that penny until you find it. Good luck with that.

Happiness and contentment should be our top priority, or at least we should seek out these real treasures because we are aware of our mortal nature. We all seek happiness and contentment, but by seeking security and control in all areas of our mortal lives. This desire for security and control is actually what helps us rob ourselves of happiness and contentment. It’s kind of twisted logic because we want to accumulate happiness and contentment, yet security-related control causes us extreme stress and related health problems.

We think that when we secure ourselves, we will be happy and content. Unfortunately, there is no security and control for a mortal being because, first of all, we don’t have control over the supply of oxygen. Second, even after we breathe in that oxygen, we still don’t have control over what goes on inside the body. With ten trillion cells and a hundred trillion good and bad bacteria, it is a miracle for us to be alive. Since we all fall into that category, mortality is a fact-based reality that we personally can’t change, so it is better to accept, adopt, and accumulate as many happy moments as possible.

If you still think, “It’s not going to happen to me,” you are simply closing your eyes and burying your head in the sand. Our actions speak for themselves because we try our best to secure ourselves financially so we can be happy. We run after and seek love and health simply because we want to be happy and content in our living years.

It is our hatred of being sick, weak, and vulnerable that makes us control our finances, health, and love. Losing them can and will leave us spiritually, physically, emotionally, and psychologically destroyed unless we have hope and optimism. Since these two belong to your spiritual health, it is a good idea to learn about spirituality before religion, psychology, and science. If you start to dissect and seek solutions for an individual’s problems, especially when they are related to happiness and contentment, you will end up with what I call pit problems—a desire to control related to personal insecurities.

Insecurity and control are both related to our in-between-the-lines knowledge. Awareness of mortality makes us secure ourselves, and this security gives birth to our control and control-related health issues.

I believe that in order to seek hope and optimism, we have to dig deep into our gut. Digging into yourself beyond being a physical being is not simple. First of all, you have to believe and separate yourself from the brain and physical body, then take a look at your knowledge as your installed data. This installed data is where your insecurities come from. From day one, we have been bombarded with the knowledge to secure ourselves physically. What goes on spiritually is not measured or given importance, so your inner self takes a hit. If you are not even aware of your true self, how are you going to find solutions for what hurts you? (Read: your body and brain)

Start communicating with your true self because that inner you is the one who suffers first before you start to become unhappy and discontent or before you start to become physically sick. If you want to look at it a little closer, just consider the placebo effect. It can tell you that even our thoughts have powerful effects on us.

Your inner self has power, and it matters. If you keep neglecting your inner self, you literally can’t find happiness and contentment, nor will you find your way to hope and optimism because they are all related to your inner self. If you keep seeking the physical aspects of life, spirituality will always be an illusion for you. Yes, it does not make any sense for someone exclusively sold on scientific and intellectual living, but remember, we are not just a physical body, nor are we just a brain full of data. We are the ones who run all the physical and intellectual affairs of our being. Just like a brand-new computer, we have to install data for it to be useful. We come into life with all the capabilities of a computer, but when that inner self is not there, we can’t run our bodies regardless of the data and capacities of the brain. Understanding this and knowing the importance of each is crucial for us to evolve and create balance in all three. For instance, the inner self can’t become physical without the functioning body and brain. Similarly, if the inner self takes a hike, everything stops functioning. If you don’t even acknowledge your inner self as separate, you will only seek to comfort yourself as a physical being. A nice meal, house, or car would be the ultimate goal for you, so your inner self would suffer, and you would not be able to enjoy everything related to it. Ocean-deep happiness, contentment, hope, optimism, and love would be hard to find to enjoy a mortal life. Just notice and see that none of them is material, yet we still want them all. Our ability to enjoy them comes from non-material things as well. Growing up, I heard in a religious sermon that it is in giving, not in receiving, that we find happiness. Why would we be happy to give or feed if it is a loss for us? Ask yourself this question over and over so you can reach deep inside yourself and meet your true self.

If you keep seeking a nice, comfortable living place with security bars to keep your stresses down, or want a body that never gets sick or old, or eat a nice meal to be healthy and satisfied, you are exclusively trying to preserve the physicality of being a human being. Remember, it is only half of our reality because just being alive is not enough for a mortal being. Whether you like it or not, happiness and contentment are crucial parts of living a mortal life. Have a belief system or not, this reality has not changed for us since the beginning. If you embrace your realities, find that inner self, and communicate to come up with a strategy for your own life, especially if you are miserable regardless of your taught data, you will be better off.

Religions have tried to sell hope and optimism but with a political price tag, which robs the individual for the mass. Technically, this is an injustice to the individual, so if someone is an alpha individual, they will lose their happiness and contentment because of the injustice. If it is not founded on justice for all, it is not equal human rights. Anything not founded on equal justice will meet its end days because it’s based on politics, not on spirituality. If religions or any other kind of governing system have survived in human societies, it is not because of politics but because of their spiritual content. Justice and spirituality prevail and sustain in human societies regardless of time and era.

If a social system is founded on equal justice and spirituality, most people will feel free and spend their mortal lives with happiness and contentment. In the past, even kings were popular because of their justice. In today’s world, most Western democracies promote equal human rights-based justice systems. If you look at the stream of migrants, not all of them are coming for financial security or are escaping poverty and wars from their homelands. Their attraction is equal human rights-based justice systems.

A while back in Quebec, there was a case where a woman wearing a niqab was charged by authorities for wearing it, and she challenged the charge in court. She won her case, asserting her right to wear the niqab. Ironically, a gay man was protesting against her religious freedom. On closer inspection, he was protesting against the very rule that also protects his own rights. The law that ensures equal human rights for all genders is fundamentally based on justice for all. Our problem lies in our tendency to become attached and comfortable where we live, which we then call home. Newcomers are often viewed as strangers who threaten our comfortable lifestyles. Recent news brings to mind an example: the town of Luokana in Italy is offering thousands of dollars and housing to attract young people to move there, as their population is declining. A population decline from seven thousand to fifteen hundred can drastically alter a community’s dynamics and should raise concerns among governing authorities. Community survival hinges on individuals, necessitating a set aside of prejudices and discriminatory attitudes to address serious survival issues. Prejudice and discrimination, if left unchecked, can prove fatal to communities, necessitating a more thoughtful approach in crafting our laws as societies.

Consider this scenario: if you live in a large city with a high cost of living and decide to move to a suburb, commuting to work daily, how would you feel if city dwellers complained that suburbanites are taking jobs without contributing city taxes, branding them as outsiders? This isn’t about different nations, religions, races, or countries; it’s about people within the same jurisdiction. Should city authorities consider barring outsiders from working within city limits? Such situations can escalate into legal battles over political correctness, forcing governing authorities to make difficult decisions. Our foundational issues of prejudice and discrimination stem from our political allegiance to smaller groups. Pursuing political agendas can spiritually harm us and undermine our human values.

During my study of Myers-Briggs personality typing, our teacher imparted a memorable insight: “One thinker can save a ship full of feelers from sinking.” Migrants are often viewed as burdens, yet in reality, most societies benefit from their contributions. Otherwise, centuries of societal progress would lose its value.

Every human life carries responsibilities; blindly following popular or group-taught beliefs can be destructive for communities in the long run. For example, in India, the long-standing preference for male children has led to population imbalances. Similarly, China’s one-child policy revealed societal fallacies, proving that collective decisions aren’t always right. Just because the majority holds sway doesn’t necessarily mean individuals are wrong.

At times, society preaches the supremacy of the collective over the individual. Yet, I advocate for equal justice for all, even in the face of mass opinion. To me, spirituality should underpin all governing systems, alongside justice. When we prioritize factors like race, gender, nationality, or religion over justice and spirituality, we perpetuate issues of prejudice and discrimination.

If we exclusively view our political landscape through the lens of division, we will remain divided. Divisiveness breeds prejudice and discrimination, perpetuating cycles of conflict that humanity has struggled with for millennia. Should we continue down this path, or is it time for a paradigm shift—starting from the grassroots, empowering individuals to question authority, rather than top-down mandates? Whether it’s the individual versus the mass or mass versus mass, we cannot achieve happiness, contentment, or look toward the future with hope and optimism. It’s time for change—a new paradigm that fosters unity and justice for all.

Love triangle (Part 3)

“Main terey deevay baalda tun marray deevay ball malika.”

These are the words I heard as a boy from my mother. I don’t know where she learned them, but they were like poetry she sang that stuck in my brain. It was so long ago that I can’t find the source, and I must state that the author is unknown.

The translation is, and I quote, “I light your lamps, O God you light my lamps.”

This may appear simple, but to me, the whole philosophy of my blog is explained in these few words. Regardless of religious beliefs, the importance of each human individual cannot be denied. In a spiritual sense, individually we all need to recognize our value. God can easily say, “I did my job by providing you with a perfectly functioning internal and external universe so you can live and enjoy your mortal life while reciprocating.” If you always want more in your life, you must put in more effort and understand how. For example, you can’t just go to a mosque or church and pray for bigger muscles; you have to go to the gym, lift heavy weights, and work hard to make your muscles grow. At the same time, never forget your mortal nature and the abilities installed within you. You are more responsible for your actions and achievements than you’ve been taught to believe. Your affiliations have political agendas and reasons to make you feel insignificant, unimportant, weak, and sinful. Therefore, it is your duty to be a CEO and recognize the politics behind all the rules, traditions, and customs of your belief system.

Returning to the love triangle.

This triangle has been an ongoing subject for me because it connects us to our core and helps us understand what we were meant to be. Our continuous potential is ingrained in us to reach where God intended for humans to reach. Whether we get there or not has a lot more to do with human beings than what we have been taught. We have the ability and choice to make the predictions of holy books come true or change the outcome.

You can believe in doomsday and intentionally use weapons of mass destruction to get it over with, or choose to start working against it. We have the know-how, and that’s why things are going wrong right now with global warming-related weather extremes. Ozone can be changed for the better or worse depending on how optimistically or pessimistically humanity believes. When you believe in God, it should be about hope and optimism, yet most religious people believe in doom and gloom for this world. Yes, it is all rosy in heaven, but my question is, if you are not happy and content in living years, how will you change in heaven? I would bet you are going to give even God a hard time pleasing you.

If God asks us, “I gave you the continuously evolving potential, why don’t you keep evolving?” We have been doing a pretty good job, but only in select departments of life. Our religious extremists from all schools of thought have been getting in the way. Most of them believe that God will destroy us, even though it has not happened for thousands of years and may or may not happen for another million years.

This belief suggests that God is like a human being who gets angry and is vengeful. They use the carrot-and-stick approach, or in other words, heaven or hell. We have been using this philosophy to train animals, and if you believe that we are no more than animals, then continue believing that. To me, I am an optimist and hope that one day we will prove that we are not just animals; we are the vessels through which God brings spiritual tasks into physical reality. We have been created from the start to be choice-makers who can overcome animal instincts regardless of their strength. Humanity has been evolving despite constant resistance from those who want to maintain the status quo. There has always been and will always be a segment of the world’s population willing to help the weaker and vulnerable. So, despite differences in size and strength, we are still evolving for the better, and it’s all because of our natural makeup. We can scientifically try to understand how life came into existence or why we believe in God while we continue to evolve. Whether it is scientifically proven or not, this matter of godliness is not for the masses; it has always been, still is, and will always be for the individual. How one lives a mortal life with ease and gives up all the material things and people they come to love and attach. Our reality is mortality, so our wisdom is and should be how to live as visitors. Especially if we are the CEOs of our lives. Understanding and living life with numbers and science may be good for certain types of individuals who want to help future generations, but for the most part, logically, a short visit should be lived successfully in all aspects of life. For example, if you are just intellectually satisfied, physical, emotional, and spiritual fulfillment can be lacking. So real happiness and contentment may take a back seat in mortal life. It could be a loss for an intellectual being. We need to zigzag between intellect and our physical mortal life because choosing one is not just for living human beings; we are not animals, nor are we just spirits. Understanding ourselves as mortal human beings is essential. Our mortality should override everything, but fortunately or unfortunately, depending on the individual’s thoughts, we somehow live our lives, sacrificing our most important things, and don’t even experience our lives to the fullest just because we want to be right.

We bring along and are dressed with compassion, forgiveness, trust, respect, personal sense of justice, and above all, the ability to love and sacrifice. If you are stuck in intellectualism and have never enjoyed the physicality of what mortal life offers, it is a loss. Sure, one can live with numbers and science, but our spiritual jewelry should not be undermined. Since spirituality is universal, it is present in all human populations and people from all walks of life. Race, color, gender, nationalism, or belief systems are taught and passed on as knowledge. The ability to be spiritual is something we all bring with us from before birth. If we wear our human jewelry with pride and prove that we are not just created as animals, we will prevail and change the outcome that most religious people have been predicting as doomsday.

If God expects us to be human beings and evolve to continuously reach our potential, then we must make efforts in all areas of life instead of confining ourselves within the boundaries of human insecurities related to belief systems, whether scientific or religious. One can choose to stay within those boundaries for themselves but should not insist on and force others to adhere.

We all have duties as the purpose of our lives, and I happen to believe that I have a duty to reach my continuously evolving potential. I believe in God, spirituality, and humanity over any human knowledge. Whether religious, scientific, or otherwise, we still have to evolve and learn to live with each other in peace. I know I have high expectations for people to overcome their sense of belonging to their respective groups, but as I said before, I am an optimist, and I hope people can see that their extremism will always be related to their sense of group belonging.

I strongly believe that if we remain entrenched in the differences of our belief systems, we may use weapons of mass destruction and bring the predicted outcome upon ourselves. God may not have a mission to physically destroy himself, but if we destroy our planet before reaching the stars, we cannot only lose our spirituality but also take away God’s physical abilities. There may be a spiritual world after humanity, but right now, it is the duty of human beings to make God physically meaningful by evolving equally in all areas of life.

Just look at history and all our advancements in science and technology, medicine, and social systems; they have all been achieved by living, breathing human beings. Certainly, with God’s help because we cannot survive without the blessings of God. Like functioning bodies and a properly functioning universe that provides us with oxygen, we should all be humble about our progress and evolution because we can only function with the help of things we have absolutely no control over. God lives throughout humanity because human beings find that their lives are not possible without the help of that which is unknown. We may solve the riddles of life with time, but our real task is to learn to live with each other without political killings.

We have no control over where and when we are born, nor do we have solid scientific evidence, or video evidence to prove that there is a world and life after death, other than what we have been taught by our groups. We don’t know what or who God is. So to me, what happens after life should be left for the afterlife; we should stop sending people to live after death just because we don’t agree. Instead of going to wars and killing each other over what we don’t even know, we need to take personal and individual responsibilities to perform properly in our living years because God’s work is done by living human beings. Find me a physical good deed done by a dead person; a physical action, spiritual or otherwise, requires a living, breathing, functioning human being.

The responsibility for continuous evolution rests on the shoulders of each and every one of us. If we start to confine ourselves because of our political influences or put ceilings on our thoughts, we are doomed before we even begin. From natural disasters to accidents to unknown events, these are all things that human beings have to learn about, understand, adapt to, survive through, follow, and achieve our potential. We need to not only think about the words from our taught knowledge but also understand what is going on inside us as individuals. To understand clearly, our knowledge has several departments, not just science and technology or religion exclusively. We have to learn about emotions, and the politics of belonging to our groups as well. We need to understand why we all have free will and why we should be individually responsible for our actions.

Why do we have the potential to love and sacrifice for others or even strangers? Why do two perfect strangers have the ability to create a family? Why do people help each other without hesitation during disasters? Why are we willing to go to war for our groups and especially for our future generations? The ability to sacrifice, where did it come from? Do you think it is a learned behavior? Personally, I don’t believe we do exactly everything that we have been taught.

To me, there is clear evidence and countless examples, such as Mozart in music and Leonardo da Vinci, and countless child prodigies. Did they learn, or did they bring that knowledge with them before birth? Neglecting everything that is not scientifically proven is wrong for human beings because we are not just numbers, and we are constantly evolving. Therefore, no human knowledge, scientifically proven or otherwise, is complete. It will always remain incomplete because we are in the process of infinite evolution.

Becoming an extremist in religious or scientific knowledge is against our evolution, especially for a mortal individual. Therefore, keeping our minds open, respecting each other, and adapting to a constantly changing world is the way it should be.

If you are an individual who is oriented towards numbers and research, you should research the ability to love, emotions, and human behavior. This way, we can understand our sense of belonging to our groups, which gives birth to ego, pride, and honor. We should research to overcome our desire to be right, the reasons for our wars, and why we deprive each other of love.

I would love to understand love and why it is so powerful that it can make or break an individual. A song comes to mind, and I quote, “Some say love, it is a razor, that leaves your soul to bleed. I say, love, it is a flower, and you its only seed. End quote.”

There is a connection between the soul and love. That’s why we need to understand spirituality to overcome racial, color, gender, religious, and national differences.

I am explaining what I know; it may change with more evolution. But for now, we need to take responsibility as human individuals. We can’t just follow what we have been taught; we have the responsibility to explore and reach our continuously evolving potential. We need to understand our emotions much more than we have because I believe in understanding life not only in its departments but in its entirety.

You can be a very good doctor or scientist, but if you don’t understand your mortal nature and see the gray between black and white, you could miss out on enjoying what mortality has to offer. Yes, your happiness and contentment are yours. If you have missed out on that, you have missed out. If you are a religious fanatic and want everyone to be just like you, you have missed out on compassion and love. Without these two, you’ve lost your spirituality, and you should know that a religious belief without spirituality is just nonsense and purely political.

To understand love, one has to understand the divisions of the love triangle and then learn to divide it equally because it is the individual who suffers yet has the power to create balance in their personal life. If you feel that you are not capable of taking charge, you have to delve into your reasons. Ask yourself why you can make everyday decisions in all other areas of your life—like waking up, eating, sleeping, going to work, or school—yet somehow you can’t make decisions to create balance in your daily life, especially when it comes to family, nationalism, and religion.

 

When you start looking for the cause, just see if you can find your political sense of belonging as a reason. If it is out of control and you lean toward group authority more than yourself and your loved ones, you owe it to yourself to create balance in your sense of belonging and your sense of freedom to be a better human being.

Personally, I think and feel from my soul, and passionately state from my heart, that it is absurd to sacrifice yourself or your loved ones for the approval of your groups. Certainly, they have a place in our mortal life, but it is only us as individuals who have a say in our lives. Living in a society where an individual does not have a say is oppressive. In today’s world, it should not be acceptable, regardless of where you live. All nations, groups, or entities should be accountable. Equal human rights should be the foundation of all constitutions.

If you think an individual has a say, just look around where you are and around the world. You will find many people who are so indoctrinated that they cannot use their personal sense of justice to balance themselves, their loved ones, and their societal affiliations. They fight and leave their spouses over their mothers or families because their society dictates so.

In Eastern societies, mothers dominate and people are taught to respect mothers but not wives. In the West, a wife might have more rights over the mother due to social influences. It is a son’s duty to balance his triangle and place everyone in their own compartment of love. Passionate love for a wife or partner should be 33%. Instinctive love for mother and family should also be 33%, with the remaining 33% for universal love for the society he belongs to. If one cannot balance these responsibilities, they are not a good CEO and will struggle to manage this love triangle, often choosing one over the others.

Suppressive and authoritarian societies are notorious for promoting the collective over the individual to maintain power in the hands of a few. Interestingly to me, it is the individual who determines how much care they have for themselves, their loved ones, and their groups of belonging. Therefore, even in democratic and advanced societies, there are many individuals with extreme and self-harming imbalances. Disorders such as anorexia, bulimia, anxiety, depression, and even suicide are common, driven by a desire to fit in, impress, or be admired by those around them.

If you cannot balance yourself, your loved ones, and your societal affiliations, you need to find spiritual strength and become the CEO of your life. Being a CEO enables individuals to become strong enough to achieve balance not only in their personal lives but in all their associations with others, including their groups of belonging.

All three corners of the love triangle surround the raw animal core. One might think this core is what separates us from animals, as it is where we are divided into two. You can call it human and animal, as I do, or you can call it good and bad, or even God and Devil. Here, you decide which side to act upon. This is why we can act differently at different times in the same lifetime. One action does not define an individual, which is why leniency exists for juveniles. Maturity may or may not occur due to the strength of our inner core.

This core is where humans become a swirling bottle of extremes. Here, you can even indulge in “God’s alcohol,” get drunk, and lose perspective of being a human being. Every aspect of being human requires balance. You can choose to be spiritual and ignore the physical aspects of mortal life, such as enjoying food, the touch of another human being, and the satisfaction of doing something for others. A life without physical fulfillment of any kind or experience is not a successful or balanced mortal life.

It is simply another extreme. Living exclusively like an animal means you cannot experience spiritual fulfillment, so we must feed both aspects to live a balanced human life. If your good side dominates, you exclusively dance for God; if your human side constantly defeats the animal side, you may swing back and lose the battle, ending up exclusively dancing with the Devil. Remember, no one is purely good or bad; we all have the potential to be good or bad at different times in our mortal lives. These two sides, which I describe in the title of this blog, make us human beings. We are not metaphorically angels, ants, or bees; they are genetically designed to follow orders. Thinking angels are somehow superior to human beings is incorrect. To me, we are human beings with free will; our actions are our personal choices, making us superior to angels due to our innate desires. We are beings in constant conflict with ourselves; if we can act spiritually despite our animal instincts, we are battling our selfishness to act selflessly. This contradictory nature is not easy to live with, so suppressing our desires makes us superior to other creatures, even metaphorical angels. The ability to show compassion, forgiveness, sacrifice, and love elevates us to a status angels cannot reach.

Now, regarding the politics of this, our groups of belonging want us to be subservient like ants and bees, preaching that we should be like angels. The motive behind this is to prioritize the group over the individual. In the spiritual realm, there is no injustice, not even for one individual. If you choose to violate anyone’s rights, it is political, even if it is for the group. In an ideal world, the first rule of spirituality is “Do not do to others what you would not want done to you or your loved ones.” Remember, as individuals, we have a short life to live, while groups continue to exist. Therefore, this individual mortality should be respected by groups with the same spiritual values, such as compassion, forgiveness, sacrifice, and love.

Returning to the inner core, my first triangle and the title of this blog are about “Who flipped my triangle, God, Devil, and human being.”

Deep within our core as human beings, God is on one side, and the Devil is on the other, surrounded by love. If you believe in God and the Devil, the world should function with or without human beings. Interestingly, if you remove human beings from the equation, both sides vanish along with human beings, rendering God and the Devil ghostly. Everything remains but loses value until a human being arrives. Remember, it is the living, breathing human individual who experiences and judges the good, the bad, and the ugly extremes. Even if good and bad were to disappear, humanity would still survive neutrally, but removing human beings results in stagnation and meaninglessness. The existence and significance of God and the Devil depend on living, breathing human beings. It is human beings who bring physicality to the actions of good and bad. Spirituality means nothing without action. Actions cannot be taken without human physicality, so God and the Devil cannot act independently until empowered by human beings. Therefore, taking responsibility to be a spiritual being is essential for modern-day science-loving and technologically savvy individuals. If your groups of belonging want you to be like warrior ants or worker bees, understand the politics of belonging and rise to become a spiritual human being, acting in accordance with your true nature.

Our capacity for good and bad can change with education, and that’s where our love triangle becomes crucial for our inner and outer peace. Education can illuminate you or leave you in the dark, much like a light switch. The potential to be good and bad has always existed for us and will continue to do so. Our strongest influences are love, nationalism, and religion. Therefore, we must become the CEOs of our lives, owning our actions so we do not treat others in ways we would not want done to ourselves or our loved ones.

This is one way to take charge of our inner core; otherwise, the politics of our groups of belonging override our personal sense of justice. We become puppets and lose our humanity. By relinquishing our CEO status, we not only become susceptible to committing spiritual crimes against others but also lose our sense of justice to the point where we can no longer recognize innocence. We let our animal or bad side win and then blame the Devil for our actions. This weakness in the human individual feeds the Devil, perpetuating the human reason why humanity struggles to live in peace. It has never been and never will be a group of people; it has always been and will always be an internally conflicted individual who lets their internal darkness prevail. That is why an individual’s inner peace is so important, and achieving inner peace is nearly impossible for those who cannot assert their CEO status.

This is where you are highly influenced by the love you receive—or don’t—while growing up.

Love, whether universal, passionate, or instinctive, sets us apart from other animals and enables us to become the workhorses of God, performing good deeds out of love rather than physical genetics. You can only learn to override animal desires with the love you experience growing up. Learning to balance all corners of the triangle is essential for achieving inner peace, especially concerning the love triangle.

Logically, if you find a new love, you cannot disregard your children, whom you instinctively love. You cannot live solely for the community while neglecting your family or abandoning passionate love for others. Look around; it happens all the time. Our history is filled with examples. Sati, for example, was a Hindu tradition where a wife was expected to be burned alive with her husband’s body. This illustrates the significant influence individuals and societies can have. It all comes down to personal choice.

Balancing is challenging, especially when raised in the political dynamics of strong group belonging. Always remember that you are born and blessed with free will and a personal sense of justice. Yet, you also have opposing and conflicting cores, so understanding your personal authority and learning to self-regulate are crucial.

You are born with free will and a sense of justice, making you a potential CEO from birth. Being the CEO of your life enables you to utilize your abilities to make the right decisions. Unfortunately, we can be easily influenced. To be spiritually good for yourself and others is a personal choice that can go either way.

I emphasize being spiritually good because believing you will become good through group approval is insufficient. You must use your personal sense of justice to be spiritually good. If you only know what your group tells you, remember that it is political, and your choices may be influenced accordingly. Remember, if it is political, it is not spiritual; if it is spiritual, it cannot be political. Doing good is universal, not confined to groups. Committing a spiritual crime against innocents belonging to an opposing group remains a spiritual crime, even if done for your chosen group. If you possess a strong personal sense of justice and act accordingly, it will inherently be spiritual and for the benefit of humanity as a whole.

If your good side outweighs your animal instinct, would you be spiritual and godly? You spread goodness to those near you, within your chosen group, but you would also be capable of doing good for opposing groups. You choose spirituality over your religion, nation, race, or gender. However, your insecure side has the potential to throw you off balance at any moment. Such imbalances can influence you to not only tarnish love but also become more animalistic than necessary. Our animal traits are dangerous because we are also intelligent; thus, a cunning animal can hide malicious intentions and use political tactics to exploit and abuse even God for political gain, let alone people.

Trust, forgiveness, sacrifice, respect, and compassion give real meaning to love, just as spiritual education makes an individual a good human being. Love has the power to transform humanity, one individual at a time.

If these qualities are absent, love becomes merely a word. Influenced by our animal side, we may use the word “love” to manipulate others into committing spiritual crimes, even against our loved ones. Yet, love has the potential to provide the highest level of security. We rely on it from childhood through old age. Our families and societies thrive on love, yet nations and religions teach us to rob each other of love because, if individuals are hurt, they may seek revenge and can easily be used for political purposes. The loss of love has the potential to deeply wound us at our core, causing our souls to bleed.

Since each of us is equally conflicted at our core, our surrounding love is not solely the responsibility of the individual; societies must also understand this. An unhealthy individual can not only harm others but also become a burden to society. Balanced surrounding love benefits both the individual, helping them win their core battle, and society in the long run. With good education across all aspects of the love triangle, you can overcome and control your animal side.

Being a CEO requires the strength to manage all aspects of life, including achieving balance at the core. Our religions and societies have taught us an education based on the wrong strategy, urging us to kill the animal side and become only good or godly, which contradicts what being human is all about. This flawed education is why human societies still struggle with social and spiritual crimes.

 

You can’t just suppress the animal inside of you because that’s your physical side, which holds very important cards. As I said, even God and the Devil can’t survive without human physicality. First and foremost, you simply can’t exist without a physical body, period. Your body brings physicality to your spirituality; all good depends on your physical actions, and you can’t perform well, or at all, without a physical body. It creates balance in all the joys of mortal life and reminds us to live as human beings on Earth. It teaches us to find happiness in all situations instead of constantly striving for something and sacrificing everything, including happiness and contentment, only to eventually perish. Our animal side constantly reminds us of our mortality, yet our groups of belonging insist that we suppress this animal side. The underlying politics aim to make us subservient so we conform and sacrifice for our group. We don’t enjoy our mortal journey and then pass away, which goes against the essence of being human. As a CEO of your life, this does not benefit you; therefore, the best approach is to find balance, avoiding extremes that diminish our humanity. It involves negotiating and achieving equilibrium so you are not torn apart at your core. Doing justice to others and yourself means living as a compassionate human being with inner peace.

When you are taught to serve, pray, and accept death, it’s a control-oriented political education with bias. This has nothing to do with God or spirituality; it reeks of political control over the masses, which is unfair to the individual. If it doesn’t uphold equal human rights for all, then it’s not divine. While we are here to do God’s work, life is also given to us to enjoy our mortal journey. As a CEO, you should be able to recognize the political motivations hidden behind our religious rules, traditions, and customs. If you believe we are nothing more than ants or bees, you fail to recognize your free will and our ongoing potential as God’s will. If advocates of group rights conceal their insecurities as prejudice and discrimination against individuals, it constitutes a spiritual crime because it involves God in human insecurities.

By now, if you have attained CEO status, you have developed strong opinions. People around you with politically influenced strong religious views may not appreciate your way of thinking, regardless of your character. Always remember, you have to live with yourself all the time, so being internally conflicted is not conducive, especially when time is limited.

As a CEO, if you monitor and personally assess the rules, traditions, or customs of your groups of belonging, you will and should always stand for justice. If injustice is perpetrated, especially by the masses against individuals, it’s akin to a bully exerting undue influence with no opposition. Remember, it is the individual who is mortal and loses a life; as a collective, we continue. Therefore, any rule that violates individual rights should be opposed.

As a CEO, you possess a personal sense of justice. Failure to utilize it can lead to inner conflicts and consequential disorders in your already finite life. No one cares more about your comprehensive health than you do, as you are the one who suffers. Maintain focus on a clean, conflict-free mortal life. If someone is unjustly harming the weak and vulnerable in your presence, stand up for them. This may not be religious, but it is a spiritual act. Injustice contradicts spirituality, regardless of its religious justification, so do not let even strong group affiliations influence your spiritual truths because ultimately, you have to live with yourself. Ignoring this fact could lead to illnesses related to internal conflict.

Always remember, both personal and general justice systems should be based on truth and simplicity, much like spirituality. Any form of deceit is simply a crime. When we intermingle our sense of belonging’s political influences with spirituality and justice systems, they lose their significance and value, especially for you as an individual.

One could argue that if a nation were governed by a justice system, politics would be unnecessary, just as an individual governed by spirituality would not need religious knowledge or teachings to be virtuous.

Now, observe the root causes of our personal, social, and global issues. They all stem from the political influence of our group affiliations.

At home, parents want their children raised according to the rules of national belonging, religious traditions, or whatever is popular in society at the time of their birth. Conflict and strained relationships in the love triangle arise when children refuse to comply. The root cause is the political influence we feel from our groups of belonging. If this conflicts with spirituality or justice, it’s unfortunate, as public opinion holds great importance to us, affecting our relationships.

I divided our love into three parts for a reason: one should become a CEO capable of understanding and managing everyday challenges. As CEOs, we all have a duty to balance this with our personal sense of justice.

If you choose to act according to your personal sense of justice, you can achieve balance in the love triangle; otherwise, you may favor one over the other and suffer the consequences.

Love has nothing to do with merely uttering words to one another; it’s about performing loving actions. It involves believing, trusting, respecting, showing compassion, and making sacrifices unconditionally. It is not an external act nor is it solely for others. It’s what happens internally, deep within your soul, at an individual level. Remember, you must be truthful with yourself and others; others may leave, but you have to live within your own skin until the day you die.

Certainly, hormones play a role in intensifying our emotional responses, but love itself originates deep within our souls, which is why some people struggle to forget and forgive lost love. Much killing occurs daily; it has always existed and will persist until we truly understand who we are. We cannot overcome the pain of lost love, so the cycle of revenge for lost love continues.

As societies and individuals, we must take heed and refrain from robbing each other of love at all costs. Even if demanded by the politics of our group affiliations, remember, our ongoing wars stem from personal and individual losses of love.

The ability to love comes naturally; we bring it with us from before birth. Circumstances may alter it, but its essence remains unchanged. It’s about our capacity to love one another. This capacity isn’t learned; it’s ingrained in our DNA, or rather, our souls.

In all human societies, there are numerous love stories illustrating the lengths to which individuals will go for love. We possess the ability to sacrifice even the ultimate. We kill and die for all three corners of the love triangle constantly. Passionate love is at the individual level, instinctive love at the familial and personal friend levels, and universal love for nation or religion. Wars are waged for it; kings have forsaken kingdoms for it. It holds the power to alter people’s behaviors toward their beliefs. It can heal or inflict illness. What is it? Why don’t we understand it? Why do we seek it regardless of age or mortality? If it were learned behavior, it would also be unlearnable. Humanity has expended more effort and resources on love than on anything else combined. Begin by seeking the reasons behind your actions, and you’ll inevitably arrive at love as the starting point—whether for love, to safeguard love, or to seek vengeance for lost love.

Consider this: when you say “I love you,” do so sincerely. Show compassion and consider the recipient’s perspective before acting.

Observe how prevalent this behavior is around you and check yourself if you find yourself playing the game of love improperly. Delve deep, be honest, and straightforward with yourself. Catch yourself if you act or feel this way.

“I love you, but I don’t genuinely care about you.”

“I love you, but I don’t truly trust you.”

“I love you, but I don’t really respect you.”

“I love you, but I’m unwilling to sacrifice anything for you.”

“I love you simply because social norms dictate it, and I must conform.”

If you hear or say the word “love” and it lacks care, trust, respect, or sacrifice, then that word may be politically tainted, even if it comes from within. Individuals with insecurities can use this as a tool to manipulate, use, and abuse others to uphold their own beliefs, be they financial, sexual, or otherwise. It’s up to the individual to determine whether the word “love” carries its intended meaning and value. If you find the word “love” empty of its true significance, you must delve deeper into its essence. Why does the word “love” possess such power? It’s due to compassion, care, trust, respect, and sacrifice!

When you blend your religious rules, particularly those influenced politically by group affiliations, there is always room for injustice. Spirituality tainted by injustice is no longer true spirituality. Justice is not justice if it’s biased based on color, gender, race, nationality, or religious beliefs.

True justice can’t be expected from politically appointed officials, just as one can’t expect a mullah, priest, or rabbi to prioritize spirituality over their religious differences. For thousands of years, they have fought for the politics of belonging to their religions, so why expect or hope for change in the next two thousand years?

The politics of group affiliation wield too much power for a mullah, priest, or rabbi to become a CEO and oppose their own religion in favor of preaching spirituality based on equal human rights for all, regardless of friend or foe.

Lady Justice has been blindfolded for a reason, but that reason has never been free from political influences. Our affiliations influence individuals to the point that what one group deems justice is seen as injustice by another group. This means one can commit spiritual crimes against fellow human beings, even the innocent, and be celebrated as a hero by their group. This is commonplace in today’s global societies.

Spirituality is buried deep beneath the politics of group affiliation, so deeply that even in modern times, with all our advancements, individuals still struggle to stand independently against their groups. We’ve created an environment where individuals are compelled to sacrifice their personal sense of justice.

If the mullahs, priests, and rabbis of the past had followed spiritual truths, there would never have been religious wars—plain and simple. Our sense of political affiliation is like a disease spreading throughout humanity. We have yet to find a cure for this illness because no one has advocated for equal human rights until now. Conservative individuals still cling to the status quo, granting power to groups while harboring dreams of global domination and keeping everyone else enslaved to their group affiliations. Despite witnessing global change firsthand, they persist in prejudice and discrimination-based politics. They remain unwilling to step beyond religious boundaries and advocate for equal human rights. They are a minority but are vocal and resort to violence to remain relevant. They fail to acknowledge that every human individual is the CEO of their own life. They cannot comprehend that individuals possess a personal sense of justice and the ability to self-regulate. This personal sense of justice forms the foundation of our benevolent actions. It’s this ability that has elevated us from instinctual animals to evolved humans. It’s this ability that drives us to extremes, even to the point of self-destruction due to guilt.