One of the widely spread narratives is that:
‘You shouldn’t try to change society, but rather focus on changing yourself.’
I absolutely agree that we should work on our personal development. However, I don’t agree that we should not affect our society.
I have more layouts, depending on the perspective from which I observe myself. I am this body but also part of society—family, town, state, global humanness, Gaia and the whole Universe.
In society, I share my influence with others. So, my influence is smaller as it grows in size. However, I am not without influence!
Our influence is much higher than we usually believe. With a good idea, you can greatly influence the whole society.
With influence comes hand in hand, responsibility. Ignoring the higher layout of being is a very immature posture of short-sighted or egocentric people. Ignorance allows sociopaths to control and use us, suppress our freedom and parasites in our society.
Growing up, we take responsibility for our society to get freedom!
Voting for representatives is not a responsibility; in fact, it’s the opposite. It’s giving up our responsibility for the benefit of the oligarchy and its puppets—politicians.
We shouldn’t think about ‘who will rule us in a rotating dictatorship (quasi-democracy)’ but ‘how we want to live’!
Nature programmed us to care about our community. If we don’t, we could feel frustrated and have depression. A healthy approach to higher layouts of ourselves will also positively affect our mental health.
Some people could partly replace the instinct ‘to care about society’ by working in a company. It can fulfil some needs, but it doesn’t give you the same satisfaction as if you were working for your community.
Blocking myself with the condition that ‘I will care about society when I develop myself’ is nonsense! My personal development won’t ever be finished. And I can simultaneously care about my body and society.
Alternative to representative quasi-democracy:
https://veda.one/synergetic_communication/
Documentary about how sociopaths rule in the hierarchy: