Sobre
Empowering oneself in the marketplace requires understanding the deep conditioning forces at play. The WA structure, more than just another circuit, revealed to me that the Not-self is inescapable. This realization came when I recognized the profound impact of entering large human groups and the helplessness individuals face in the material world. Most people think conditioning starts with childhood experiences, mainly influenced by parents. However, there is a more transpersonal conditioning rooted in our shared evolutionary history. This conditioning affects our perception of human identity and societal hierarchies, shaping our sense of reality, which is the only thing all humans share. Our daily lives are governed by small group dynamics (Penta), where everything seems predictable. However, in larger social settings (WA), such as events or institutions, homogenized hierarchies take over. WA governs the group life with standardized social and legal rules, even when we are asleep. It controls our neighborhoods, schools, and institutions, ensuring conformity to its power dynamics. Institutions represent everyone, yet no one in particular, as leadership is interchangeable. Unlike Penta’s familiar rules, WA laws are inflexible. While Penta offers a sense of “home,” WA makes us feel alone among strangers, dictating what holds tangible value for everyone. Each WA channel defines collective value, while the remaining channels support and enforce these definitions. Penta first stifles our individual spirit, then WA exploits this by ensuring we conform to pre-established societal norms. This conditioning is why so many suffer from identifying with acquired, homogenized mental habits. Alokanand Diaz