The World Built by the Man Who Changes but Does Not Transform
The world is constantly changing. So why does human suffering continue, only changing form?
Perhaps the biggest mistake of humanity is to mistake change for transformation.
Throughout history, kings have gone, states have changed, revolutions have been made, ideologies have been born and destroyed. Science has advanced, technology has gained dizzying speed. The world has constantly changed.
But the wars did not end.
Exploitation has not disappeared.
Inequality has not ended.
The domination of man over man continued in different forms.
Because it was often only the form that changed; very little was transformed.
However, change and transformation are not the same thing.
Change happens outside.
Transformation is inside.
Change changes institutions.
Transformation mindset.
Change changes administrations.
People of transformation.
This is why many revolutions in history have sometimes created new problems instead of solving the fundamental problems of humanity. Palaces have fallen but the palace mentality has survived. Governments have changed but the desire to rule has not.
Many systems established in the name of freedom have turned into new mechanisms of oppression over time. Because the untransformed consciousness uses every power it gets to reproduce the old world.
This reality is most evident in male-dominated civilization.
The issue here is not biological masculinity; it is the male-dominated mentality that has been imposed on humanity for thousands of years. This mentality is based on dominating rather than sharing, controlling rather than understanding, ruling rather than living together.
Therefore, the untransformed man reproduces the same hierarchy in the family, the state, the party, the organization and even in the revolution.
Discourses change.
Institutions change.
Slogans change.
But the desire to rule often remains the same.
Today, humanity is experiencing one of the greatest technological leaps in history. But at the same time, it is lonelier than ever, more addicted to consumption than ever before and more in search of meaning than ever before.
Technology has changed, people have not.
Tools have evolved, consciousness has not.
The world has grown, man has shrunk.
Perhaps the real problem of humanity is not lack of change, but lack of transformation.
Because every system established by the untransformed human being will eventually resemble itself.
The world is changing. But are we really transforming, or are we just giving new names to our pain and continuing to live the same story?
