Tag: WAKING UP

  • The Tipping Point

    The Tipping Point

    How many people does it take to change the world?

    It is a fascinating question.

    Critical Mass

    History shows us that major changes rarely happen because everyone suddenly agrees. The end of slavery, women’s right to vote, the civil rights movement, the fall of apartheid, and even the end of the Cold War all began with relatively small groups of people who saw the world differently.

    Researchers studying social change have suggested that a committed minority of perhaps 10–25 percent of a population may be enough to create a critical mass where an idea begins to spread rapidly through society.

    But there is something even more interesting about these historical examples.

    The Same System

    None of these movements changed the underlying system itself.

    Slavery ended, but the system of ownership remained.

    Women gained the vote, but the political system remained.

    Apartheid ended, but the system of trade remained.

    Governments changed, political parties changed, laws changed, and rights expanded. Yet both the monetary system and the political system remained largely intact.

    The basic foundation of civilization continued.

    The game stayed the same.

    Only some of the rules changed.

    That does not diminish the importance of these achievements. 

    They represented enormous steps forward for humanity. But they were surface reform movements, not systemic transformations.

    They changed how people could participate in the system.

    They did not fundamentally change the system itself.

    A New Revolution

    That is why I believe we may be approaching something fundamentally different today.

    For the first time in human history, humanity is not merely debating who should govern the system.

    We are beginning to question the system itself.

    For thousands of years, every civilization has relied on human labor in some form.

    Slavery.

    Feudalism.

    Serfdom.

    Capitalism.

    Wage labor.

    Different names. Different forms. But the same basic principle.

    Some people performed the work that society needed, while others benefited from the results.

    The central question was always:

    Who will do the work?

    Who will do the menial boring work that needs to be done so the upper classes can thrive?

    The New Factor

    Today, for the first time in history, that question is beginning to change.

    Artificial intelligence and robotics are advancing at extraordinary speed.

    Machines can already perform many physical tasks. AI is beginning to perform intellectual tasks that previously required highly educated professionals.

    This is not merely another technological improvement.

    It represents the possibility that humanity may eventually no longer need millions or billions of people to perform routine labor in order to keep society functioning.

    The Paradox

    The paradox, though, is that all these millions and billions of people are the ones that make up the monetary system itself. The monetary system has always been based on a working class earning money, spending money, taking up loans and paying back loans. Without enough people keeping money in circulation there will be no monetary system. And the world as we know it today will not function.

    The New Future

    Whether that future arrives in ten years, fifty years, or one hundred years is not the point.

    The point is that it is conceivable now . For the first time we can actually see and feel it is possible.

    And once that possibility appears, entirely new questions emerge.

    If AI and robots can increasingly perform necessary work, why must survival still depend on employment?

    If abundance is technologically possible, why should scarcity remain the organizing principle of society?

    If resources can be managed intelligently, why must access depend primarily on money?

    Waking Up

    Technology alone is not enough.

    A new system cannot emerge simply because new tools exist.

    Human beings must also recognize the possibility and move toward it.

    That may be the second tipping point now taking place.

    Around the world, more and more people are beginning to question assumptions that previous generations largely accepted as inevitable.

    Must we organize society around money, trading and ownership?

    Must competition always dominate?

    Must access to life’s necessities depend upon purchasing power?

    Or could there be another way?

    The conversation itself is changing.

    And conversations often precede transformations.

    The Awakening

    The awakening taking place today is not only about technology or spirituality.

    It is also about understanding the consequences of the system we currently live within.

    Powerful Incentives

    For generations, the monetary system has provided powerful incentives for innovation, production, and economic growth. 

    Yet those same incentives often encourage overconsumption, waste, planned obsolescence, resource depletion, and the pursuit of profit even when it conflicts with human or environmental well-being.

    At the same time, the system depends upon a form of economic coercion. Most people cannot simply choose whether to participate. They must earn money in order to gain access to food, housing, healthcare, and the other necessities of life.

    The result is a civilization that often measures success by financial growth rather than human flourishing or ecological health.

    As technology advances, more people are beginning to ask whether this arrangement still makes sense.

    The real awakening, then, is not merely recognizing what AI and robotics can do.

    It is recognizing that humanity may no longer need to organize itself around assumptions that were created for a very different age.

    Perhaps the tipping point is reached when enough people see both sides of the equation:

    Not only that a new possibility exists.

    But that the old way is no longer serving either humanity or the planet as well as it could.

    A Systemic Shift

    Previous revolutions asked:

    Who should be in charge?

    This revolution asks:

    How should civilization itself be organized?

    Previous revolutions replaced rulers.

    This revolution may replace the system itself.

    Previous revolutions changed the players.

    This revolution may change the game.

    The New Foundation

    For thousands of years, humanity has experimented with different forms of governance, different political systems, and different economic models.

    Yet nearly all of them shared one common foundation: competition for access to resources through money, force, and ownership.

    What if that foundation itself is no longer necessary?

    What if advances in technology allow us to move from governing people toward managing resources?

    From control toward coordination.

    From competition toward collaboration.

    From ownership toward stewardship.

    The Impossible

    Of course, such a transformation will not happen overnight.

    Most people still think within the framework they were born into. That is natural. Every generation does.

    People once believed slavery was necessary.

    People once believed kings ruled by divine right.

    People once believed women should not vote.

    People once believed apartheid would last forever.

    The impossible often appears impossible until it becomes inevitable.

    Perhaps that is where we stand today.

    Not at the end of one political era.

    Not at the beginning of another ideology.

    But at the threshold of something much larger.

    A transition from governance through power and control toward coordination through knowledge, cooperation, and intelligent resource management.

    A transition from competing over access to resources toward managing resources for the benefit of all.

    A transition from asking who owns the world to asking how best to care for it.

    The Choice

    Will it happen?

    No one knows.

    How many people are needed?

    No one knows that either.

    History suggests that tipping points often become visible only after they have already begun.

    For years, nothing seems to happen.

    Then suddenly, everything changes.

    Perhaps the real tipping point is not technological at all.

    Perhaps it is the moment enough people realize that the way we organize civilization is not a law of nature.

    It is a choice.

    And choices can change.

    In any case, the most important tipping point is within the minds and hearts of people. If they are to have a choice at all they must know another choice is possible.

    That is exactly why I wrote the book Waking Up – A journey towards a new dawn for humanity. To give humanity a vision. To give an inspiration that another world might be possible.

    So. If this article resonates with you, I ask you to share it. Because if you truly want the tipping point to happen showing this possible choice to the world is the most important thing we can do.

    And if you would like to explore this possible vision of a future beyond scarcity, ownership, and artificial divisions, you can find the novel here:

    Discover the story

  • Waking Up – What Does It Actually Mean?

    Waking Up – What Does It Actually Mean?

    The background for the title.

    Waking up is not about opening your eyes in the morning.

    It is about becoming aware of what was previously unconscious.

    At its simplest:

    Waking up is the shift from being run by patterns to seeing the patterns.

    Most of us move through life inside inherited structures — psychological, cultural, economic — without realizing it.

    We mistake patterns for reality.

    Until something shifts.

    The Adversary Within

    In ancient Hebrew, satan(שָׂטָן) meant adversary — the accuser, the opposing force.

    Psychologically, that adversary lives within us.

    It is the ego.

    The ego divides experience into:

    • Me vs. you

    • Mine vs. yours

    • Gain vs. loss

    • Enough vs. never enough

    It defends identity.

    It anticipates threat.

    It secures advantage.

    The ego is not evil. It is a survival structure.

    But when it is unconscious, it becomes absolute.

    It convinces us that separation is ultimate.

    That “me versus you” is the basic truth of existence.

    That is the sleep.

    When the Pattern Scales

    When millions of individuals are unconsciously identified with ego, they design systems that reflect it.

    Division becomes economic structure.

    Scarcity becomes the organizing principle.

    Money —  which always implies ownership and exclusion — amplifies the ego’s logic:

    Secure your share.

    Compete.

    Accumulate.

    Defend.

    Repeat.

    Unconscious ego creates division.

    Division shapes systems.

    Systems amplify division.

    And when fear hardens, division escalates into conflict and war.

    The battlefield outside is preceded by division inside.

    But there is something deeper than ego.

    The Field of Awareness

    Ego is a pattern in consciousness.

    Awareness is the field in which experience happens.

    Thoughts arise in it.

    Emotions move through it.

    Fear appears within it. And disappears.

    Awareness can observe the ego.

    But the ego cannot observe awareness.

    Because the ego is a pattern within that field.

    If you can notice defensiveness arising, you are not identical to it. You are the One noticing.

    If you can observe fear forming, you are not the fear. You are the One observing.

    The observer is wider than the pattern.

    Waking up is the shift of identity:

    From the adversarial pattern

    to the awareness in which the pattern operates.

    The Illusion of Absolute Separation

    The illusion is not that individuals exist.

    The illusion is that separation is ultimate and absolute.

    At our core, what we are is this field of awareness.

    Different bodies.

    Different histories.

    Different perspectives.

    But the same fundamental capacity for experiencing.

    This can be felt through empathy.

    If someone hands you a knife and tells you to cut another human being, something in you recoils.

    Not merely because it is socially impolite.

    But because harm registers deeply.

    Empathy reveals something profound:

    The same field of awareness looking through “me” is looking through “you.”

    Different expressions.

    Shared ground.

    Ego says we are separate.

    Awareness knows we are connected.

    Waking up is awakening from the illusion that the adversary is who we truly are.

    Why the Book Is Called Waking Up

    The title operates on several levels.

    Benjamin Michaels wakes up biologically after 100 years of cryonic sleep.

    His body reactivates.

    His eyes open.

    He enters the year 2115.

    But that is only the first layer.

    When Ben awakens, he carries with him the mindset of 2015:

    • Scarcity assumptions.

    • Competitive conditioning.

    • Defensive identity.

    • A world structured around money and ownership.

    He does not immediately understand the new civilization.

    He interprets it through old patterns.

    He reacts from ego.

    And gradually — through experience — he wakes up.

    He begins to see that the adversarial structure he once took for reality was not the only way humanity could organize itself.

    He wakes up from his ego.

    The biological awakening is the doorway.

    The ego awakening is the transformation.

    And while Ben was frozen in time, something parallel happened.

    Humanity itself was waking up.

    Over the century he slept, civilization slowly became aware of its own unconscious patterns — ego-driven scarcity, division, adversarial economics.

    That awareness changed things.

    The world Ben wakes up in was not built by force.

    It was built by awareness.

    Benjamin wakes up physically.

    Then psychologically.

    Humanity woke up collectively.

    That layered awakening is why the book carries its name.

    What Waking Up Really Means

    It is not mystical spectacle.

    It is not denial of individuality.

    It is not the destruction of systems.

    It is the recognition that:

    The adversary is a pattern.

    Separation is not ultimate.

    Fear is not identity.

    Awareness is the field in which it all appears.

    And once awareness sees clearly, the pattern no longer rules unconsciously.

    Waking up begins within.

    But when it spreads, the world changes.

    An Invitation

    You do not have to accept any philosophy.

    You do not have to adopt any belief.

    You can test this directly.

    Watch what happens the next time:

    • You feel offended.

    • You feel the urge to defend.

    • You feel threatened.

    • You feel the need to win an argument.

    • You feel the fear of loss tightening in your chest.

    Pause.

    Ask yourself:

    Who is reacting right now?

    Is it awareness — or is it the adversary pattern/ego?

    Notice the division forming.

    Notice the “me versus you” structure activating.

    Don’t suppress it.

    Don’t judge it.

    Just see it.

    That moment of seeing is waking up.

    And if enough individuals begin to notice the adversary within, the adversarial systems outside begin to loosen.

    Not by force.

    By clarity.

    Benjamin Michaels wakes up into a new world.

    The deeper question is:

    Are we willing to wake up inside this one?

    If this resonates I ask you to share this article.

    And don’t forget, you can get the free companion book here.

  • The Free Companion Book Is Now Available

    The Free Companion Book Is Now Available

    We are in ecological overshoot.

    The planet is strained.
    Politics are polarized.
    The monetary system rewards scarcity while promising prosperity.

    Not because humanity is incapable — but because the tool we use to coordinate ourselves no longer fits the world we live in.

    For months, I have been working on four questions:

    WHERE are we as humanity?
    WHAT do we actually want?
    HOW could we transition?
    WHY did we choose to change?

    Those questions became The Companion Book to Waking Up.

    I wrote it because I kept receiving the same questions: How would such a world actually work? How could we transition from here to there? Is it realistic? The companion exists to address those questions directly — structurally, not rhetorically.

    It examines the structure of the monetary system, ecological limits, human psychology, and the possibility of redesigning our global coordination around stewardship instead of ownership.

    No ideology.
    No utopia.
    Just structural clarity.

    And today happens to be a rare Saturn–Neptune conjunction at 0° Aries.

    Saturn represents structure, limits, and reality.
    Neptune represents dreams, spirituality, and imagination.

    Structure meeting vision.

    Astrologers describe this alignment as a potential turning point for humanity — a moment when long-term dreams demand practical form and collective direction.

    What better day to release a book about aligning vision with redesign?

    The Companion Book is now available.

    It is free.

    This book also contains the first 4 chapters from the novel in chapter 21.

    Subscribe here to receive the PDF or EPUB. Your choice:

    GET THE FREE COMPANION BOOK HERE

    If it resonates, share it.

    — Harald