“We are experiencing a problem.”
This simple line is not just a statement—it’s an alarm. Not just about politics or economics, but about consciousness itself. It invites us to pause and ask: What exactly is wrong? And more importantly, where is the problem taking place?
The answer: in the mind.
“It is important to know the etymology and definition of the words that you speak in everyday language, because language informs reality.”
This speaks to linguistic determinism—the idea that language doesn’t just describe the world; it shapes the way we perceive and interact with it. When you use a word like “government,” “race,” or even “freedom” without knowing where it comes from or what it truly means, you risk being governed by someone else’s definition of it.
Language is architecture for the mind. If your vocabulary is a cage, your thoughts will never leave the cell.
“Government: Govern = to control. Ment = mind. Government = mind control.”
This isn’t conspiracy; it’s a symbolic truth. This etymology is not just linguistic—it’s philosophical. It suggests that the systems we live under are not merely about organizing society, but about shaping thought—beliefs, behavior, and self-perception.
When control of external behavior becomes control of internal narrative, that’s no longer governance—it’s possession.
“Yes, they are attacking you spiritually.”
The spiritual attack is subtle: through media, education, entertainment, even religion. Not always maliciously, but always effectively. You’re trained not to ask “Who am I?” but instead “How do I fit in?”
It’s an attack on identity. On origin. On purpose.
And if you don’t define those for yourself, someone will define them for you.
“Mind control only works when you don’t know you are in control of your mind.”
This is the axis the whole message turns on. The enemy isn’t the government. It isn’t the system. It’s amnesia.
They win when you forget.
You win the moment you remember.
“When you believe these external powers have more power than the internal body, that’s where you’ve lost the war.”
This is metaphysics. The internal body is not just flesh—it’s spirit, will, and imagination. Every great spiritual teacher said the same thing: The Kingdom is within. Not in the White House. Not in a revolution. Within.
If you believe the government defines your freedom, they own your soul.
If you know your freedom was never theirs to give, you become untouchable.
“Your mind is quite literally God.”
This is not blasphemy—it’s empowerment. Not saying you are the God, but that you carry the divine spark. The mind, when aligned with truth, does not reflect power—it generates it.
This is echoed in:
- Ancient Kemet (Egypt): As above, so below. As within, so without.
- Yoruba: Ori (the head) is the seat of destiny.
- Christian scripture: Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.
“All of the shackles fall.”
Once you remember your divinity, systems lose their grip.
Lies crumble. Fear dissipates.
You don’t beg for freedom. You walk in it.
“Like a caged bird who forgets how to fly…”
This metaphor is critical. It’s not the bars that hold the bird—it’s the forgetting. The deepest form of oppression is one where the oppressed becomes the enforcer of their own captivity.
Freedom, then, isn’t escape. It’s remembrance.
The Real Message
You’re not being asked to rise up with weapons.
You’re being asked to wake up with wisdom.
Because:
- Systems of oppression feed off your fear.
- They grow stronger every time you doubt yourself.
- But they collapse the moment you remember who you are.
This piece is not about rebellion.
It’s about resurrection.
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