In this day and age, how can one have a positive outlook? Everywhere you look diseases, war, terror, earth disasters, corruption in business and government. Too many are just out for themselves period. Also, with the impending Planet X cataclysm ahead, there is very little to have a positive attitude about.
The effect of great changes on ones life are often described a having life turned upside down, implying that the up side, the optimistic or upbeat outlook,
has become a downer, depressive. That this is the prevailing attitude is due to the loud complains of those who have lost in the change, as those who have
gained are too busy enjoying the new vistas that have opened before them to comment. We are not speaking here of material goods, the homes lost, the
business inoperable, the value of what had been put aside in savings diminished or gone. We are speaking of the thousands of depressing deadlocks that
hold people in their ordinary lives, which they see no way of escaping, suddenly broken. The most obvious is the bondage that material goods place on
their owners, and the social obligations that societies place upon their members.
Marriage brings the joys of companionship, partnership, and the patter of little feet. It also almost inevitably brings the responsibility of holding that boring
job and the requirement that one restrict social interaction to the work place and close family. For a man to have a close friendship with a woman other
than the wife, or the wife to enjoy the company of another man, is considered a threat, brings pouting and argument, and however innocent, is dropped for
the sake of peace and the continuation of all the positive thing the marriage brings. The expectation that the martial partner must then be all to the other is a
pressure and responsibility that is in and of itself depressing. We are not speaking here simply of sex, as these restrictions impose immobility on the partners
ability to react to life in general. Should a husband want to help build housing for the poor on the other side of town on a Saturday morning, his wife
reminds him that she expects him to repair their garage, and the fact that the construction group includes a number of single woman who share the
husband's concern for the poor is a hidden agenda. Should the wife want to garden to give the neighborhood children the experience of growing their own
food, she may find her husband making derogatory comments about her rough hands and sunburned neck, her focus no longer appropriately on being his
showcase or trophy wife. Restrictions, not empowerment, becomes the norm.
Jobs, whether termed a career or profession or trade or simply something temporary to bring in money, are equally as restrictive. Income level goes up as
experience or skills increase, so that the longer one holds the job, the more they earn, and the family does not sympathize with having that income reduced
simply because the wage earner wants a change. There was the expense in time and money for collage or university or apprenticeship, the union seniority,
the associations with others in the field, the vacation time and pension benefit earned because of time on the job to consider. Once again, the wage earner is
restricted, looking out on a vista of years, decades, before him or her and seeing no change possible, as any step outside of the rut puts at risk all that has
been gained. Should a doctor wish to serve the poor, rather than those with the funds to pay the clinic bills, the doctor must face angry clinic stockholders
and most likely a divorce from a spouse who does not wish to sell the home and second car and drop the country club membership. Should a plumber
wish to work in waste management, realizing what goes down the pipes and the damage it can do to the environment, the plumber would likely need to ask
the spouse for financial as well as emotional support during a time of lost income, and once again social and marital expectations become a head wind
against change.
We have mentioned that the poor, the homeless, the mentally ill, will fare better during the coming changes because they will not grieve for lost possessions,
and already being at the bottom of lifes ladder, will find themselves suddenly counseling others on how to survive. We have mentioned that the coming
changes, the pole shift, is a great leveler, putting the formerly wealthy on the streets and in desperation, and the formerly homeless in a larger junk yard from
which to build a hovel. What we have not mentioned is that outside of the loss of material possessions, and the lose of the security blanket that most
assume they have around them in the form of pension and insurance coverage and social services, the wealthy and financially secure will have a greater
downside up from changed social circumstances. No longer forced to put in hours that restrict ones life virtually to the work place, no longer forced to
pander to the supervisor or boss and restrict ones chatter to reflect the proper attitude, no longer forced to freeze out social interactions that threaten the
status quo or repress the urge to spontaneously help others, the former drone of the status quo finds themselves more alert, feeling an energy they had lost
early in life as restrictions closed about them like a net, and perhaps feeling alive for the first time in decades.
These opportunities for renewal will come to all because of the massive changes the pole shift will bring. Even where the family survives intact, the home,
though damaged, survives the quakes and winds intact, and the political fabric of the region earns its leadership by their response to the catastrophe and
remains thus intact, there will be a changed environment. Where formerly, the weight of what was to be lost was on the side of the status quo, now the
status quo is dwarfed by a compelling emergency. Helping to rebuild housing for those now in out in the rain, the doctor giving service to the poor without
expectation of payment, dealing with chemical spills and broken sewage mains that threaten the environment and health of the community, and putting up
gardens as a food source when the supplies scrapped from the wreckage of homes and grocery stores run down - now no one can argue that these steps
are not of prime importance. The clingy and demanding spouse, the possessions demanding to be polished, the inane boss demanding to be considered
brilliant, all can be ignored. Life has received an infusion of energy, charged not only by need for action on the part of anyone with a heart that cares, but
also by the breaking of virtual bondage that most societies represent. A downside, suddenly up!