By Antoine Prins
An analytical essay on patterns, trauma, trauma healing, manifestation, and the path forward:
the creation of a new world — a world of harmony, peace, and the understanding of human consciousness.
Introduction – Beneath the Surface
We live in a world shaped by complex structures: education, science, media, economics, and politics define what is considered truth and reality. Many people assume these systems exist to solve problems and protect society. Yet it is increasingly evident that major decisions are made out of public sight and without meaningful citizen participation. Not through a single hidden plan, but through intertwined interests, entrenched routines, and economic pressure. Closed international forums such as the World Economic Forum in Davos, Bilderberg meetings, policy-making within UN organizations, or climate summits like COP30 formulate goals and guidelines with global consequences, often lacking transparency and accountability.
When this text refers to “the system,” it does not imply a singular conspiracy, but a web of institutions, incentives, and dependencies that steer behavior — often without individuals being consciously aware of it.
Which information shapes our worldview, and who decides which solutions are pursued — and which are not?
If you are genuinely content with yourself and the world as it is, this text asks nothing of you. But for those who sense that something is misaligned — that life could be more humane, more conscious, more truthful — this essay is an invitation. Not to convince, but to inspire you to become the change you are seeking.
1. How Our Worldview Is Formed
Before systems can change, we must understand how perception arises. The human brain filters vast amounts of stimuli. Neuroscientific research shows that the body registers millions of informational units per second through the senses, while conscious awareness can actively process only a few dozen. More than 99.999% of perception is therefore filtered unconsciously. Conscious thought represents only the tip of the iceberg; most perception and decision-making occur outside deliberate control.
What we repeatedly see and hear is automatically accepted as normal and true.
Information that falls outside this frame fades from view or feels uncomfortable.
Children and adults internalize beliefs about:
what is sensible,
which authorities are credible,
which questions are acceptable.
This process is subtle and largely unconscious. As a result, systems can continue to function even when their harmful consequences are visible.
Cognitive dissonance plays a crucial role: when new information conflicts with existing beliefs, it can cause psychological stress, leading to reflexive rejection rather than evaluation. This explains why factual arguments sometimes fail to persuade.
2. Why Uncertainty Makes Us More Obedient
Structural uncertainty — regarding the economy, war, energy, or health — narrows mental bandwidth. Independent thinking diminishes, and people seek quick, clear answers. From a neurobiological perspective, the body shifts from a regulated rest-and-digest state to a chronic fight-or-flight mode, dominated by fear, reactivity, and compliance, while reflection and nuance decline.
Patterns emerge:
deviating ideas feel threatening,
authority appears necessary,
obedience feels safer than doubt.
Thus, control grows without explicit coercion. Institutions follow their own internal logic, where maintaining power and structure increasingly outweighs human well-being.
3. Who Decides What We See
Media compete for attention. Conflict and threat therefore receive more coverage than nuance or solutions. Negative and fear-driven news demonstrably generates more engagement and advertising revenue than reporting on recovery, cooperation, or long-term solutions. Wars, attacks, and crises dominate headlines, while positive developments such as ecological restoration, archaeological discoveries, or scientific breakthroughs are structurally marginalized. Images of conferences and negotiations prevail, but what actually changes often remains vague. Citizen oversight is largely absent.
Those who rely on screens for information receive a worldview shaped by selection mechanisms: some problems appear enormous, others disappear entirely. This steers emotion, opinion, and policy on a large scale. The increasingly important question becomes: what are we not seeing?
4. Why Power Continues to Concentrate
As decision-making increasingly takes place within closed consultation structures, influence shifts away from citizens and parliaments toward small groups of policymakers, corporate leaders, and experts. Examples include: Davos, Bilderberg, UN summits, European policy structures.
This does not necessarily imply malicious intent. It reflects systemic dynamics: power concentrates, interests reinforce one another, and dissenting voices are gradually marginalized. The prevailing model is predominantly top-down: laws and regulations are imposed, while local communities retain little control over their own regions, cultures, and ways of life.
5. Why Solutions Fail to Materialize
Systems often begin as solutions but eventually become ends in themselves. Decision-making disconnects from original purpose. Historically, this pattern is not new: throughout centuries, elites have centralized political, economic, and knowledge-based power — from the Roman Empire to colonial trading companies. What once served efficiency and growth repeatedly detached from human and ecological well-being.
Climate summits such as COP illustrate this mechanism. Meetings are held, budgets spent, and targets reiterated, yet concrete measures remain limited. Meanwhile, established players benefit, while pollution, toxic emissions, and ecosystem loss continue.
The focus rests heavily on climate change as an abstract phenomenon, while direct human impact — structural pollution, contamination of soil and water, industrial exploitation — remains underemphasized. What may be part of long-term natural processes receives more attention than what demonstrably lies within immediate human control.
6. Systemic Deception and Information Control
Across multiple domains with major societal impact — including public health, security, geopolitics, justice, and scientific knowledge production — recurring patterns appear in which decision-making is centralized and dissenting perspectives are systematically marginalized. This dynamic raises fundamental questions about power concentration, transparency, and whether public interest truly guides policy.
The attacks of September 11, 2001, mark a critical turning point. The official narrative justified far-reaching geopolitical, legal, and military measures. At the same time, unresolved questions persist regarding investigative limitations and the exclusion of contradictory data, with criticism often socially or politically discredited rather than substantively addressed.
Within this post-9/11 reality, Israel — in its Zionist political and military manifestation, explicitly distinguished from Judaism as religion or culture — occupies an exceptional position. Structural violations of international humanitarian law, documented in UN reports, and near-unconditional Western support are rarely fundamentally questioned. During the Israel–Hamas conflict of 2023, internal Israeli statements and journalistic investigations emerged regarding the use of extreme doctrines, including so-called Hannibal orders, leaving responsibility and proportionality ambiguous in the absence of fully independent forensic inquiry.
Comparable patterns appeared during the COVID-19 crisis within global public health governance. A largely uniform vaccination strategy was deployed worldwide, despite significant differences in risk across population groups. Critical voices were given limited space, while vast public funds flowed to a very small group of pharmaceutical corporations. Gradually, it has been acknowledged that certain interventions lacked transparency and carried tangible risks.
Even domains long dismissed as fringe, such as ufology, exhibit similar dynamics. Decades of classification and marginalization contrast with recent testimony from military pilots and parliamentary hearings. The question is no longer whether we are alone, but when conscious contact becomes collectively possible.
Within this broader context also fall testimonies concerning organized sexual and ritual abuse networks. Globally, an estimated 1.2 to 1.7 million children are trafficked each year, a significant proportion never officially identified or recovered. Cases such as Dutroux and Epstein reveal recurring patterns of obstruction, missing evidence, and failure to prosecute, pointing to structural vulnerabilities within judicial and political systems.
Taken together, these cases do not constitute isolated anomalies but a recurring systemic dynamic. The central question remains:
are our systems designed to control power — or to protect it?
7. Collective Trauma and the Loss of Self-Determination
Wars, mass disruption, and economic insecurity leave traces that extend across generations. Psychological and epigenetic research shows that trauma can be transmitted not only culturally but biologically. In addition, consciousness research and regression therapy explore how experiences beyond a single lifetime may persist, offering a broader soul-based perspective on recurring fears and patterns.
This helps explain why system critique often provokes emotional resistance even when arguments are valid. Fear constricts imagination.
From a soul-based perspective, a deeper question arises: are we truly a one-time, temporary experience, or rather an ongoing field of consciousness — a soul energy — currently incarnated in a human body? Allowing this possibility reframes trauma not as personal failure, but as experience within a broader learning process that transcends a single lifetime.
8. The Role of Consciousness in Change
Research into consciousness, heart–brain coherence, and intention-driven change demonstrates measurable effects on physiology and behavior. Institutions such as IONS and studies on meditation and breathwork show that inner regulation produces external impact. Pioneers like Joe Dispenza integrate these findings with epigenetics and neuroscience; recent peer-reviewed publications suggest that targeted mental training can influence gene expression.
Insights from quantum physics suggest that observation and expectation are not passive processes. Reality is not shaped by seeing first and believing afterward; rather, belief often precedes perception. Many people live according to the inverse assumption — waiting for external proof before allowing inner conviction. In doing so, change remains dependent on circumstances instead of emerging from consciously chosen belief.
When belief, attention, and intention shape behavior, manifestation becomes not mysticism but psychology, neurobiology, and social dynamics.
9. Algorithms as Invisible Influencers
AI and algorithms increasingly determine which information becomes visible. These systems inherit the biases of designers, funders, and commissioners: those who pay define priorities. Democracy thus changes not abruptly but gradually — control becomes technical rather than political.
10. New systems emerge alongside the old
Change rarely unfolds through existing power structures. Systems that sustain themselves are, by definition, slow to facilitate fundamental renewal. Genuine transition therefore does not arise through confrontation, but through the emergence of viable alternatives alongside the old.
These alternatives are already visible. All over the world, people are experimenting with regenerative agriculture, food forests, local cooperatives, community projects, and forms of living and working that are less dependent on centralized systems. These initiatives share a core principle: they restore the relationship between human beings, nature, and community.
In practice, this means working with soil regeneration rather than extraction; organizing food, care, or education locally; and creating ways of living in which time, attention, and ecology once again take the lead. Not as a model to be scaled up, but as a response to what people experience in their immediate surroundings.
At the same time, these very solutions are often obstructed by existing regulations. Self-sufficient living, ecological building, or small-scale agriculture frequently collide with legal frameworks designed for large-scale, industrial models. This tension reveals where the old system is trying to protect itself — and where the new is already becoming reality.
What matters is that this movement is not driven by protest alone, but by embodiment. What receives attention, grows. Those who direct their energy exclusively toward what is wrong remain psychologically connected to the problem. Those who instead invest in what works — however small — strengthen the field of possibilities.
This can begin with seemingly simple choices: engaging differently with information, consuming more consciously, investing time in local networks, or revaluing silence and nature. Such shifts are not merely private decisions; they influence how systems adapt to human behavior.
New systems do not need to be perfect. They only need to be livable, human, and repeatable. Their strength lies not in scale, but in resonance.
Closing — from consumer to participant
Real change arises when people stop passively consuming narratives and begin actively investigating. Mainstream media do not offer a neutral window, but a selection. Those who take truth seriously compare sources, tolerate uncertainty, and relearn trust in their own perception.
Nature plays a key role in this process: those who remember that humanity and planet form a single system regain clarity and responsibility. Le Rêve de Gaia, as a foundation and Academy, stands within this broader movement — not as a counterforce, but as a living example that systems shift when consciousness changes.
In natural systems, resilience does not arise through control, but through diversity, cooperation, and time. These same principles prove effective at the human and societal level as well — not as theory, but as lived experience. Those who truly feel this naturally assume responsibility.
Conscious choices in information, consumption, and collaboration are not individual luxuries, but a collective lever. If this text invites independent inquiry, connection with nature, and embodied responsibility, it has served its purpose. The rest does not arise from persuasion, not from belief, but from experience.
Antoine Prins