Page 564
Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2026 3:00 pm
When a person not only lives but also creates music, films, or any kind of
content, they can create it in the same way: either bright and constructive
or dark and destructive. For instance, take a psychologist — it’s very trendy
on social media right now. They might write posts or film short videos
talking about relationships. But a psychologist who discusses relationships
could choose to write only about life hacks, about how to make a relationship
even happier, tell stories about the most joyful couples, or talk about
long-term marriages, family unions, mutual respect between men and
women, forgiveness, and giving second chances. Everything constructive,
right? Consequently, if you happen to come across such a blog in the vastness
of the internet, it will broadcast that energy to you. You will be plugged into
a version of relationships that isn’t negative or reversed, but rather positive.
Do you understand? It’s the same with travel. There might be a travel blogger
filming shows about Vietnam, Singapore, or Taiwan, but with a subtext of the
“dark side” — slavery, prostitution, or “forbidden” things, blah blah blah.
If you watch that blogger, you will begin to perceive every country —
including your own country and your own city — from that negative angle.
They are opening the door for you into the negative reality of it all, where those
things truly do happen. These people aren’t lying, but they are telling you
about hell. Do you understand?
I have emphasized this in earlier books and previous volumes, but I will
repeat it now: everything that is happening has become clear. From roughly
2019–2020 to the current year, 2025, I’ve noticed that almost everyone —
99 percent of public figures, especially travel bloggers — began for some reason
to talk only about the negative. The celebrity commentators, the reviewers
— everyone started looking for flaws in everything and highlighting them.
And if you “listen to and eat” all of this, as they say, you end up in this reversed,
looking-glass world where there is only trouble and everything is bad.
What is the conclusion? What do I take note of for myself first and foremost
— on this path to wisdom I am currently walking? It means that if I want to
write short treatises on social media about society, family, marriage, or the
relationship between parents and children, and if I write them only with a
positive note, in a constructive key, focusing only on the pluses, then the people
reading them will begin to look at their own families from that same angle.
content, they can create it in the same way: either bright and constructive
or dark and destructive. For instance, take a psychologist — it’s very trendy
on social media right now. They might write posts or film short videos
talking about relationships. But a psychologist who discusses relationships
could choose to write only about life hacks, about how to make a relationship
even happier, tell stories about the most joyful couples, or talk about
long-term marriages, family unions, mutual respect between men and
women, forgiveness, and giving second chances. Everything constructive,
right? Consequently, if you happen to come across such a blog in the vastness
of the internet, it will broadcast that energy to you. You will be plugged into
a version of relationships that isn’t negative or reversed, but rather positive.
Do you understand? It’s the same with travel. There might be a travel blogger
filming shows about Vietnam, Singapore, or Taiwan, but with a subtext of the
“dark side” — slavery, prostitution, or “forbidden” things, blah blah blah.
If you watch that blogger, you will begin to perceive every country —
including your own country and your own city — from that negative angle.
They are opening the door for you into the negative reality of it all, where those
things truly do happen. These people aren’t lying, but they are telling you
about hell. Do you understand?
I have emphasized this in earlier books and previous volumes, but I will
repeat it now: everything that is happening has become clear. From roughly
2019–2020 to the current year, 2025, I’ve noticed that almost everyone —
99 percent of public figures, especially travel bloggers — began for some reason
to talk only about the negative. The celebrity commentators, the reviewers
— everyone started looking for flaws in everything and highlighting them.
And if you “listen to and eat” all of this, as they say, you end up in this reversed,
looking-glass world where there is only trouble and everything is bad.
What is the conclusion? What do I take note of for myself first and foremost
— on this path to wisdom I am currently walking? It means that if I want to
write short treatises on social media about society, family, marriage, or the
relationship between parents and children, and if I write them only with a
positive note, in a constructive key, focusing only on the pluses, then the people
reading them will begin to look at their own families from that same angle.