We live in a world where we daily witness what appears to be an endless parade of darkness triumphing over light, of cruelty overwhelming compassion, of evil seemingly victorious while goodness struggles and fails. People are bombarded daily with images and narratives that tell them the world is descending into chaos, that evil is winning. It is difficult not to wonder why a benevolent universe would allow such suffering, such injustice, such apparent victory of malevolent forces over the vulnerable and innocent.
In this post the channeled entity Seth reveals something that will shake the foundations of commonly held beliefs. What Seth reveals challenges everything humanity has been taught about the nature of good and evil, about power and powerlessness, and about the very fabric of existence.
In point of fact, evil does not triumph because it is more powerful than good. Evil appears to triumph because humans believe it must... because they have been taught that it will... and because their very conception of reality demands that they see it this way.
The real truth, the one societal powers do not want known is that there is no inherent evil in the universe at all. You read that correctly... there is no inherent evil in the universe at all. None.
What is called evil is a distortion, a misunderstanding, a twisted interpretation of energy that is itself neutral and creative. Humanity has been taught to fear its own nature, to distrust spontaneous impulses, to believe that left to their own devices, people would become monsters of selfishness and destruction. This teaching embedded in religions, reinforced by the sciences, perpetuated by social structures, has created the very conditions that make evil seem real and powerful.
Consider for a moment the nature of consciousness itself. Each atom, each molecule, each cell of the human body possesses its own consciousness, its own awareness, its own intent toward growth and fulfillment. This consciousness is not neutral in the sense of being empty or without direction. It is imbued with what can only be called a bias toward creativity, toward life, toward expansion and joy. The universe does not create consciousness and then leave it to randomly stumble through existence, accidentally creating good or evil. No, consciousness itself carries within it an innate knowledge of its own worth, its own value, its own right to exist and to create.
When humans are born, they come into physical reality with a built-in set of psychological attitudes that are meant to ensure their survival and their flourishing. They are born knowing that they are good, that life is good, that the universe supports their existence and desires their growth. What happened then? How did beings born with such inherent optimism and faith come to believe in the triumph of evil?
The answer lies in the peculiar development of human species consciousness. As human beings evolve the capacity for self-reflection, for conscious thought, for the examination of their own mental processes, they also developed the ability to doubt, to question, to imagine possibilities that contradicted their inner knowing. This was not a mistake or a flaw in design. It was a necessary stage in their development, a step toward becoming conscious co-creators of reality. But in taking this step, humans temporarily lost touch with the deeper certainties that had guided them. They began to project their inner experience outward to create gods and demons that represented aspects of their own consciousness that they no longer understood or trusted.
The concept of evil as a real force, as something with its own independent existence and power, arose from a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of aggression and creativity. True aggressiveness in its most basic sense is simply directed action, focused energy moving toward a purpose. The birth of a child is one of the most aggressive acts in physical reality. Yet, it is not called evil. The thrust of a seed breaking through soil, the surge of spring after winter, the forceful expression of any creative impulse. All of these are aggressive in the true sense. They are life asserting itself. Consciousness expanding into new forms, energy refusing to remain static.
Humans have learned to confuse this natural creative aggressiveness with violence, with destruction, with a desire to harm. This confusion is at the root of belief in evil as a separate force. Human religions taught people to distrust themselves, to believe that their natural impulses were sinful, that their spontaneous desires would lead them into wickedness. Human sciences taught that people were accidents, meaningless arrangements of matter in a universe that cared nothing for their existence... that human consciousness was an epi-pen phenomenon of brain chemistry... that humanity's highest ideals were merely sophisticated survival mechanisms.
Between these two authorities, religious and scientific, humans were stripped of their natural confidence in their own being. They were told that without external control, without rigid rules and punishments, without constant vigilance against their own nature, they would descend into chaos and evil. And because they believed this, because they accepted this view of themselves, they began to create the very evil they feared.
Here is a truth that will disturb many. Every act of violence, every cruelty, every manifestation of what is called evil is committed by someone who believes they are powerless, who has lost faith in their own worth, who has disconnected from their natural impulses toward creativity and connection.
The fanatic who kills in the name of ideals does so because the fanatic does not trust personal power to create change through natural means. The dictator who oppresses millions does so because of fear of personal insignificance and seeks to compensate through external domination. The criminal who violates others does so because the criminal has been violated in sense of self because the criminal no longer believes in personal value or the possibility of legitimate fulfillment.
None of these individuals wake up one morning and decide to be evil. They are not possessed by demons or infected with some spiritual disease. They are acting out the logical consequences of beliefs that society teaches everyday that human nature is fundamentally flawed, that power comes from domination rather than creation, that survival requires the defeat of others.
Seth examines more closely how evil appears to triumph, and why this appearance is so convincing to humanity. People live in a time when communication technology allows them to witness suffering and injustice from every corner of the globe instantaneously and in vivid detail. News media, entertainment industries, educational institutions all focus relentlessly on conflict, disaster, crime, and tragedy. Why? Because humans have been conditioned to believe that this is what is real... that these negative events are more significant, more worthy of attention, more representative of truth than the countless acts of kindness, creativity, cooperation, and love that occur every moment of every day.
Humanity has been taught a kind of reverse idealism. People hold up visions of perfect good that seem impossibly remote while accepting negative events as normal, expected, and inevitable. This creates a peculiar psychological state in which people are always watching for evil, always anticipating disaster, always prepared for the worst. This constant focus on the negative has a creative power that most people do not understand.
Human thoughts, beliefs, and expectations are not passive responses to an objective reality that exists independently of consciousness. They are active forces that shape the very reality that is experienced. When people concentrate their attention on evil, when they discuss it, fear it, prepare defenses against it, they are feeding it energy, giving it form, making it more real in their experience.
This is not to say that humans create evil out of nothing. What they do is take neutral energy, the same energy that could become joy or creativity or growth, and they channel it through the filter of their beliefs about evil, and it emerges in their experience as the very thing they feared.
Media reinforces this process constantly. People are shown images of violence and told to fear for their safety. They are given statistics about disease and told to protect themselves through constant vigilance. They are warned about economic collapse, environmental catastrophe, social decay, and they are encouraged to believe that these dangers are overwhelming, that individuals are powerless against them, that only large institutions and authorities can provide any hope of survival.
Seth explains something about the nature of power that will illuminate why evil seems to triumph. True power, authentic power, flows from connection to one's own being, from recognition of one's own creative capacity, from faith in the basic goodness of existence. This power is gentle but irresistible, quiet but profound. It does not need to dominate others to prove itself. It does not need to destroy to create. It expresses itself through natural growth, through cooperation, through the spontaneous organization of events that serve the benefit of all involved.
This is the power by which a child learns to walk, by which an artist creates beauty, by which communities form and flourish, by which the human body heals itself and maintains its miraculous complexity without conscious direction. This power is so fundamental to existence that it is taken entirely for granted. It is not noticed because it is as natural as breathing, as ordinary as sunlight.
But humanity has been taught to associate power with something quite different... with force, with domination, with the ability to make others do what is wanted against their will. This false idea of power is what drives those who commit what are called evil acts.
The dictator seeks power through control because he does not feel the true power of his own being. The corporation that poisons the environment in pursuit of profit does so because those making decisions have lost connection with their natural understanding that harming the environment harms themselves. The religious zealot who condemns and punishes others for failing to follow his rules does so because he is terrified of his own impulses, his own spontaneity, his own natural self. In every case, what appears to be an exercise of great power is actually an expression of fundamental powerlessness, of disconnection from genuine creative energy.
Here is the secret they do not want known. Evil appears to triumph precisely because those who could stop it do not believe in their own power to do so. Good people, kind people, creative people, compassionate people stand by and watch injustice unfold because they have been taught that they are powerless to change it. They have been told that only governments, only institutions, only collective action can make a difference and that individual choice and individual behavior are insignificant.
This is a lie of the most pernicious sort. Every single individual action, every thought, every belief, every choice made contributes to the mass reality that is shared. There is no action too small to matter, no individual too insignificant to create change. When people withdraw their energy from evil, when they refuse to believe in it, when they decline to participate in the dramas of victimization and domination, they literally reduce its power to manifest in their experience.
But humans have been taught to feel guilty about their desires, suspicious of their impulses, ashamed of their natural aggressiveness. They have learned to repress their creative urges because they fear those urges might be selfish or destructive. People hold back their natural expressions of power because they have been told that power corrupts, that asserting oneself means dominating others, that taking up space in the world means depriving someone else. And so natural creative energy, which should flow freely into constructive action, becomes damned up, blocked, distorted. It seeks expression anyway because energy must move, consciousness must act, life must create. But because humans have denied it natural outlets, it explodes in destructive ways or it turns inward and creates illness and depression or it gets projected onto others whom they then see as evil, as threats, as enemies to be defeated.
Consider the phenomenon of war which seems to be clear evidence of evil triumphing, of destruction overwhelming creation. Why do wars happen? Not because human beings are inherently violent or because some people are evil and must be stopped. Wars happen because masses of people, entire populations share beliefs about powerlessness, about the necessity of defending against enemies, about the impossibility of resolving conflicts through creative means. Wars are materialized beliefs made visible and tangible. Before a single shot is fired, before the first soldier marches, the war has already been created in the minds and emotions of all those involved. The beliefs create the reality, not the other way around.
If humanity truly understood that it creates its own reality through beliefs, people could not be mobilized for war. They would recognize that the enemy they fear is a reflection of their own inner conflicts, that the threat they perceive is a materialization of their own unexamined beliefs about scarcity, about competition, about the need to destroy others to preserve themselves.
Human history books tell that evil has triumphed many times... in the Holocaust, in slavery, in countless genocides and atrocities. They present these events as evidence that evil is a real force, that it can overwhelm good, that humanity is capable of descending into unimaginable darkness. But what historians failed to understand, what they cannot understand within their framework of beliefs is that these events were created by millions of people acting out shared beliefs about the nature of reality.
Hitler did not single-handedly create the Holocaust. He gave form to ideas that were already present in the mass consciousness... ideas about racial superiority and inferiority, about the need to purify society by eliminating undesirable elements, about the right of the powerful to dominate the weak. These ideas were not unique to Nazi Germany. They existed and still exist in various forms throughout the world. What made them manifest so dramatically in that time and place was a particular combination of circumstances in which enough people believed in them strongly enough to act them out.
Seth addresses something that will be difficult for many to accept. Those who suffer under what is called evil, are not simply victims, powerless and innocent, crushed by forces beyond their control. This does not mean they deserve their suffering or that they consciously choose it in ordinary terms. It means that at deeper levels of their being, levels not accessible to ordinary consciousness, they have participated in creating even the experiences that cause them pain. This is perhaps the most challenging aspect of the truth Seth brings because it seems to blame the victim, to excuse the perpetrator, to make moral judgments impossible. But this is not what is being said at all.
Understanding that each being creates its own reality does not mean abandoning compassion or accepting injustice. It means recognizing that genuine help, authentic change can only come from empowering people to recognize and use their own creative power, not from simply rescuing them or punishing their oppressors.
The Jews who died in the Holocaust, the slaves who suffered in bondage, the victims of any atrocity held beliefs about themselves and reality that made them vulnerable to these experiences. This does not make them responsible for the evil done to them in the sense of deserving blame. It means that they were acting out certain psychological and spiritual dramas, exploring aspects of experience that needed to be explored, demonstrating to themselves and to the world the consequences of particular beliefs. Many of these beings at levels beyond ordinary understanding chose these experiences as learning opportunities, as ways to contribute to the evolution of consciousness, as dramatic demonstrations of what happens when humanity loses touch with its own creative power and worth. This is not to justify or minimize their suffering. It is to place it in a larger context that restores meaning and dignity to experiences that otherwise seem merely senseless and cruel.
Humans resist this understanding because they have been taught to think of themselves as victims, as subject to forces beyond their control, as vulnerable to random misfortune. Religions taught that people were at the mercy of God's inscrutable will, or the devil's malevolent power. Sciences taught that humans were subject to impersonal physical laws... genetic determinism, environmental influences that shaped them without their participation. Both perspectives rob people of their power and their responsibility. They make humans passive observers of their own lives, waiting to see what fate or circumstance will bring.
This is perhaps the greatest triumph of the idea of evil. It has convinced people that they are powerless, that their thoughts and beliefs do not matter, that reality is something that happens to them rather than through them.
But consider the implications if this were true. If humans were truly at the mercy of evil forces, if malevolent powers could invade their experience regardless of their own consciousness, then they would have no real freedom, no genuine autonomy, no creative capacity; their choices would be meaningless, their efforts futile, their existence a kind of cosmic accident subject to random destruction. At any moment, the universe would be fundamentally hostile or indifferent and humanity's highest values, noblest impulses, most profound experiences of love and beauty and truth would be mere illusions... biochemical reactions without ultimate significance.
This is the vision of reality that the belief in evil necessarily entails. It is a vision of meaninglessness dressed up in moral language. A vision that strips existence of value while pretending to defend it.
Seth explains what is actually happening when evil appears to triumph. Humanity is witnessing the materialization of beliefs that no longer serve its growth... beliefs that have been held so long and so strongly that they must be made visible, dramatic, undeniable, so that people can finally see them clearly and choose to change them.
Every historical atrocity, every period of darkness and suffering has eventually led to an expansion of consciousness, a recognition of previously unexamined assumptions, a growth in compassion and understanding. This is not to say that suffering is good or necessary. It is to say that when suffering occurs, it occurs within a larger framework of meaning within a context of growth and evolution within a system that ultimately bends toward greater awareness and greater love.
The current era presents humanity with challenges that seem overwhelming... environmental destruction, nuclear weapons, terrorism, pandemic disease, economic instability, political polarization. People are bombarded daily with images and narratives that tell them the world is descending into chaos, that evil is winning, that humanity is doomed. But these challenges are not evidence of evil's triumph. They are opportunities for humans to evolve beyond the beliefs that created them.
Each crisis is a mirror reflecting back the consequences of collective assumptions about reality. The environmental crisis shows what happens when people believe they are separate from nature... when they see the world as a resource to be exploited rather than a living system of which they are a part. The threat of nuclear war shows what happens when it is believed that security comes through the power to destroy, that peace can be achieved through the threat of annihilation. The pandemic shows what happens when disease is believed to be an external enemy rather than a communication from one's own body and psyche.
These crises seem like evidence of evil because they are looked at through the lens of old beliefs... beliefs in powerlessness, in scarcity, in competition, in the need to defeat enemies, in the fundamental flawedness of human nature. But if the perspective shifts, if it is recognized that these challenges are created collectively through beliefs, then suddenly there is power to create different outcomes. Humans are no longer victims waiting for rescue or for doom. They are creative beings in the process of learning, growing, evolving, bringing new realities into existence through the focused power of consciousness.
Seth reveals a secret that changes everything. Human impulses, spontaneous urges to act, are not random or dangerous. They are communications from the deeper self, guidance from the part of each person that knows individual purpose, that understands what is needed for growth and fulfillment, that is always working toward personal benefit and the benefit of all. When these impulses are trusted, when they are followed without the distortions of fear and guilt, they lead infallibly toward experiences that serve the individual and serve others.
The impulses that arise from authentic being never seek to harm others, never desire destruction for its own sake, never aim toward what would genuinely be called evil. The impulses that seem destructive, the urges that frighten are not natural impulses at all. They are distortions created by the repression of natural impulses, by the buildup of unexpressed energy, by the denial of personal creative power.
Think of it this way. If a river is damned up, the water does not simply disappear. It builds pressure, seeks other outlets, and may eventually burst through in a destructive flood. But the water itself is not evil. It is simply following its nature, which is to flow. In the same way, when natural impulses are damned up, when people refuse to acknowledge them or express them in healthy ways, they do not disappear. They build pressure and they will find expression somehow. And that expression may appear destructive. But the impulse itself, the fundamental urge toward action and creativity is not evil. It is life itself seeking manifestation. When this is recognized, when the fight against human nature stops, when people learn to trust the wisdom of spontaneous being, it is discovered that what was feared as potential evil was actually frustrated good, blocked creativity, denied life.
So how then does evil triumph? It triumphs only in the sense that humans allow it to, that they believe it must, that they create space for it in their reality by constant focus on it, faith in its power, conviction that it is real and dangerous and stronger than good.
This is the great secret, the one societal powers do not want known. Because if this truth were truly understood, people would stop being afraid. And once fear stops, being easy to control stops. Those who benefit from human fear, who maintain their power by convincing people that they need protection, rules, and authority do not want humans to discover their own creative power. They do not want people to realize that they are the source of their own experience, that they can choose differently, that they can withdraw their energy from systems of control and create something entirely new.
This is not a conspiracy in the ordinary sense. There is no secret cabal deliberately keeping truth from humanity. Though there are certainly institutions and individuals who benefit from ignorance of personal power. The conspiracy, if it can be called that, is much more subtle and pervasive. It exists in the basic assumptions of culture, in the unexamined beliefs that everyone shares, in the structure of language itself, which embeds certain ideas about causation and power and the nature of self.
When people say, "Something made me angry," they are implying that anger is caused by external events rather than by interpretation of those events. When people say, "I caught a cold," they are implying that disease attacks from outside rather than being created from within. These linguistic patterns repeated millions of times every day reinforce beliefs about powerlessness, about victimhood, about reality as something that happens to people.
Breaking free from the triumph of evil requires first recognizing that humans give evil whatever power it has in their experience. This is not the same as denying that painful destructive events occur. They do occur, but they occur within a larger context of human creation, and they continue to occur only as long as people continue to believe that they must.
This is why Seth emphasizes so strongly the importance of examining beliefs. Beliefs are not neutral descriptions of reality. They are creative templates through which raw energy is shaped into experience. If people believe that evil is powerful and good is weak, they will create experiences that confirm this belief. If they believe that they are powerless to affect large-scale events, they will be powerless. If they believe that human nature is fundamentally selfish and destructive, they will see selfishness and destruction everywhere they look.
But what happens when these beliefs begin to be questioned? What happens when experimentation with different assumptions about reality begins?
This is where real transformation becomes possible. Try believing just as an experiment that humans are fundamentally good, that natural impulses serve growth and the growth of others, that there is power to create positive change in immediate environment. Try believing that the universe is supportive, that coincidences are meaningful, that desires matter and can be fulfilled. Try believing that other people are doing the best they can with the beliefs they hold... that even apparently evil actions arise from fear and misunderstanding rather than from inherent wickedness.
As these beliefs shift, experience will begin to shift. Opportunities will appear, connections will form, circumstances will align in ways that support new beliefs. This is not magical thinking or wishful denial. It is a precise understanding of how consciousness creates reality.
External facts are not changed through the power of positive thinking. What changes is which version of reality is experienced. Which possibilities are actualized? Which aspects of the infinite field of potential events are drawn into personal experience.
The world contains infinite possibilities. Every moment offers countless potential outcomes, directions, experiences. Which of these are encountered depends entirely on beliefs, expectations, and focus of attention. When focus is on evil, sensitivity to evil is created. It is noticed, attracted, participated in. When focus is on good, on creativity, on love, on the inherent value of existence, sensitivity to these aspects of reality is created. They are noticed, attracted, participated in.
Consider a practical example. Two people witness the same accident. One person sees evidence of how dangerous and random life is, how vulnerable everyone is, how tragedy can strike at any moment. This person becomes more fearful, more cautious, more convinced that evil and misfortune are powerful forces. The other person sees evidence of how resilient people are, how quickly help arrives, how community forms in crisis, how even difficult events can bring out strength and compassion. This person becomes more confident in life's basic goodness, more willing to take risks, more convinced that even challenges can serve growth.
Same external event, completely different experiences created from it, depending entirely on the beliefs and focus of the observer. Neither interpretation is more objectively true than the other. Both are creative acts, choices about which aspects of the event to emphasize and remember and build into ongoing reality.
Now apply this principle to larger scale events, to social conditions, to historical movements. The same events can be seen as evidence of evil's triumph or as opportunities for growth and awakening. The choice of perspective is not morally neutral. It has real consequences for what happens next, for how the situation evolves, for what becomes possible. When enough people view a crisis as hopeless, as evidence that evil has won, they create hopelessness and defeat. When enough people view the same crisis as a challenge that will call forth human creativity and cooperation as an opportunity to evolve beyond old patterns, they create solutions and transformation.
This is not about denying reality or pretending that problems don't exist. It is about recognizing that response to problems is itself a creative act that shapes what happens next. The reason evil appears to triumph then is that humanity has been taught to focus on it, to expect it, to prepare for it, to see it as more real and more powerful than good. People have been taught to believe that idealism is naive, that trust is dangerous, that spontaneity is reckless, that natural impulses cannot be trusted. Humans have been taught to doubt themselves, to second-guess intuitions, to seek authority outside themselves, to follow rules created by others who supposedly know better what they should do and be.
All of these teachings drain natural power and make people dependent on external structures for their sense of security and identity. They make humans easy to control, easy to frighten, easy to mobilize for purposes that may not serve their actual interests. Breaking free from this pattern requires courage, but not the kind of courage usually celebrated in stories. It requires the courage to believe in oneself when everything around insists on doubt. It requires the courage to trust personal experience when authorities tell people it is invalid. It requires the courage to act on impulses when taught to suppress them. It requires the courage to see good when everyone around is focused on evil.
This is the most revolutionary act possible in the world... to recognize and claim personal creative power, to acknowledge that reality is formed through beliefs, to accept responsibility for experience without guilt or blame, to trust in the basic goodness of existence and one's own nature.
When this shift is made. When it is truly understood that evil has no power except what is given it through beliefs, something remarkable happens. Fear stops. Not because danger is denied or because pretense is made that painful things do not occur, but because recognition occurs that each person is the creative source of personal experience, that different beliefs can be chosen and thereby different outcomes created.
This recognition brings with it a sense of power and freedom that is unlike anything previously known. People are no longer at the mercy of external forces. They are no longer victims waiting for rescue or doom. They are conscious creators participating moment by moment in the formation of their reality.
From this place of empowerment, people can actually be far more effective in addressing the problems they see in the world. Instead of fighting against evil, feeding it energy through opposition, good is created. Instead of trying to destroy what is not wanted, what is wanted is built. Instead of seeking to defeat enemies, the beliefs that created the conflict in the first place are understood.
This is what is meant by constructive action. By using power naturally and effectively, a person who truly understands these principles does not need to make grand gestures or launch great crusades. Such a person simply lives from a creative center, trusting impulses, following interests, expressing unique gifts. And as this is done, everyone around is automatically affected, spreading the energy of confidence, of faith in existence, of natural power.
There are examples of this in human history, though they may not be recognized as such. Every genuine artist who creates beauty in a world that tells them such efforts are frivolous is demonstrating this principle. Every parent who raises children with love and respect, trusting their natural growth instead of trying to control them into acceptable shapes, is demonstrating this principle. Every person who refuses to participate in the dramas of victimization and blame, who maintains faith in life even in difficult circumstances, who sees opportunity where others see only problems, is demonstrating this principle. These are not necessarily famous or celebrated people. They are ordinary individuals who have discovered the secret that good does not need to fight evil. It needs only to be itself fully and confidently.
The truth societal powers do not want known, the secret that changes everything is that humans are the creators of their reality, that beliefs form experience, that people are not victims of forces beyond control, but powerful beings in the process of learning to use creative capacity consciously.
Evil triumphs only in the eyes of those who believe it must, who have been taught that it will, who focus their attention on it and thereby give it form and energy. When belief is withdrawn from evil, when participation in the narrative of good versus evil is refused, when recognition occurs that there is only consciousness exploring itself in infinite variety, learning and growing and creating through all experiences, then the very concept of evil's triumph becomes meaningless.
This does not mean that all experiences are equally pleasant or that suffering does not matter. It means that suffering is not evidence of evil's power, but rather an indication of beliefs that need examination and transformation.
Every painful experience, personal or collective, contains within it the seeds of its own transcendence. Every crisis is an opportunity for growth. Every challenge is an invitation to discover capacities not previously known. This is the true nature of reality. hidden beneath the narratives of evil and victimhood that culture teaches.
Humans are here to create, to explore, to discover what is possible when consciousness takes form in matter. When awareness becomes embodied, when spirit plays in time and space, the implications of this understanding are vast. It means that waiting for authorities to fix problems is not necessary. It means that dependence on governments or institutions or experts to provide rescue is not required. It means that daily choices matter, that thoughts and beliefs have creative power, that each person is significant and valuable and capable in ways barely begun to be imagined. It means that evil, far from being an overwhelming force that threatens to destroy all good, is actually a misunderstanding, a distortion of energy that dissolves when belief in it stops, when feeding it attention stops, when organizing life around fear of it stops.
Seth wants to be clear about what is being said and what is not being said. Ignoring injustice or accepting mistreatment passively is not the message. Suggesting that guilt should be felt about suffering experienced or that victims are to blame for victimization is not the message. What is being said is that genuine change, lasting transformation, true healing can only come from understanding and altering the beliefs that created the conditions wished to be changed. Fighting against evil reinforces the very beliefs that give it power. Creating good, manifesting natural creative impulses, trusting in the basic benevolence of existence... these are the actions that actually transform reality.
Humans have enormous power, far more than they have been taught to recognize. This power is used every moment of every day, usually unconsciously, to create the experience called life. When this power begins to be used consciously, when responsibility for beliefs is taken, and those that serve growth and fulfillment are deliberately chosen, when natural impulses are trusted and followed without the distortions of guilt and fear, it is discovered that desired reality can indeed be created, not through force or manipulation or domination, but through the natural expression of personal creativity being in cooperation with the creative impulses of all other beings. This is the truth that changes everything... the secret that liberates from fear and powerlessness, the understanding that makes triumphant evil impossible.
Humans are not victims. They are creators. Evil does not triumph. It merely appears to do so in the experience of those who believe it must. When beliefs change, experience changes. When enough individuals change their beliefs, collective reality changes. This is not a distant hope or an impossible ideal. It is the actual structure of existence, the way consciousness works, the mechanism by which worlds are created and transformed.
Humanity is living at a time of tremendous opportunity. When old beliefs are breaking down, when new possibilities are emerging, when the human race is ready to take the next step in its evolution toward conscious creation, the choice belongs to each person as it has always been. Will the triumph of evil continue to be believed in? Or will the creative power of good that lives within, through, and as each human being be recognized, waiting only to be acknowledged and expressed?
from YouTube @SethsForbiddenReality on November 17, 2025
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