14/06/2026
There is something I have reflected on for many years.
People occasionally ask why I continue to speak about human rights violations, systemic failures, wars, abuses of power, sovereignty issues, and the suffering taking place in different parts of the world.
Some believe that conscious living means turning away from such realities. Some believe that maintaining a high vibration requires limiting exposure to difficult truths and focusing only on love, joy, personal wellbeing, and one’s own path.
I understand this perspective, yet I do not share it.
My understanding of consciousness has always included responsibility.
What happens in the collective is not separate from us. The events unfolding across the world are not isolated from our inner lives. They are reflections of human consciousness expressed through systems, institutions, cultures, communities, and individual choices.
The suffering of a child, the erosion of human dignity, the violation of rights, the abuse of power, and the normalisation of injustice do not exist outside of us. They reveal aspects of humanity that require our attention, our awareness, and our willingness to respond.
Being aware of suffering is not a low vibration.
Facing harsh truths is not a low vibration.
Conscience is not a low vibration.
These realities may be difficult to process, but difficulty does not diminish their importance.
Looking away does not create peace; it creates bypassing.
Silence does not create justice; justice requires truth and compassion expressed through action.
Avoidance does not create healing; it often buries wounds more deeply.
A peaceful future cannot be built upon denied realities. Harmony cannot emerge from foundations that remain unexamined. Lasting transformation requires truth, and truth often asks us to witness things that are uncomfortable.
Throughout history, many realities remained hidden because too few people were willing to look, speak, question, or challenge them. As more people become aware and find the courage to speak, the spell of fear begins to weaken. What was once unspeakable becomes discussable. What was once invisible becomes visible.
This is how collective consciousness evolves.
Not through ignorance.
Not through escapism.
Not through pretending suffering does not exist.
Through awareness.
Through courage.
Through responsibility.
Through truth.
Our work in the School has never been about escaping the world. It has been about helping people become more conscious participants within it.
For me, spirituality is not withdrawal from life. It is deeper participation in life.
It is the willingness to bring wisdom into action, compassion into service, and consciousness into the realities of the human experience.
If we hope to create a more peaceful world, we must be willing to see the world as it is, not only as we wish it to be.
If children are suffering, if communities are displaced, if human rights are violated, if corruption and injustice persist, these realities deserve our attention. They deserve our voice. They deserve our humanity.
Speaking up is not an act of division.
It is an act of participation.
It is a recognition that our shared future is something we help shape together.
I believe that consciousness grows through awareness, and awareness carries responsibility.
The transformation of humanity does not happen by turning away from its wounds.
It happens when enough people are willing to face them, understand them, and participate in creating something better.
Nüsra