š§ My Worldview
Before I embark on this journey of writing out my thoughts on this thought experiment of how humans could break out of the human condition and start evolving consciously, I would like to present this chapter as a philosophical anchor point for the rest of my book – an existential undertow to my disillusionment not only with the human rat race, but with the whole unconscious drift of humanity itself. In this, I’m trying to channel the very existential frustration that most people feel deep inside but never articulate – or even allow themselves to think.
I’d call my worldview a mix of realist, anti-utopian, and maybe even post-hope – yet still willing to try, still resisting the inertia.
Iāve come to see humanity itself as a ship with no captainādrifting, reacting, adapting, but never evolving consciously. What we call civilization is mostly just layers of reactive behavior: survival instincts, greed, fear, and tribal thinking dressed up in policy, politics, and marketing.
We are not led by wisdomābut rather, we are pulled by the invisible hand of a blind superorganism, a collective momentum that emerged from evolution, not intention.

Power or freedom doesnāt lie with the peopleāit lies with systems, with oligarchs, with feedback loops too big to fight.
And the individual? Often just a pawn in a cosmic game of absurdity, making peace with powerlessness by pretending their tiny wins are freedom.
šÆ The Big Question No one Seems to Ask
What is the shared end goal of humanity?
- Is there one?
- Has anyone tried to define it?
- Can 8 billion people agree on anything, let alone evolve toward a shared, uplifting purpose?
Instead, we drift.
We argue.
We cope.
And the machine continues to spin on.
š My Manifesto
In my mind, I donāt accept the way life has ended up being structured for most of us. I believe the default way most of us are forced to liveātrading the majority of our time and energy for wages just to surviveāis not a natural or acceptable way of being. I reject the idea that we must depend on others, or on corporate systems, just to access the basic resources of life. To me, this is not freedom; itās modern, normalized captivity.
This wage slavery modelāwhere we spend the bulk of our waking lives dependent on employers, stuck in routines we didnāt choose, performing roles that barely serve our own valuesāis not acceptable to me.
I donāt want to build my life around economic fear, time scarcity, or someone else’s definition of success.
And I believe most people donāt want that eitherātheyāve just been conditioned to accept it as normal.So, here’s my stance:
- Until the rest of society is ready to evolve, Iāll play the game just long enough to escape the rat race and build freedom on my terms.
- If enough people agree to move forward together, Iām fully ready to redefine how income, work, and value flow in a society that honors freedom over dependency. then Iāll gladly participate in building a new model for income, cooperation, and life itselfāone that doesnāt require humans to sell themselves to survive.
- If you think Iām being unreasonable, Iād actually love to hear why. Because if not wanting to live in psychological and financial captivity is radical, then maybe itās time we question what weāve accepted as āreasonable.ā
This is the starting point of all my thoughts, questions, and frameworks in the chapters ahead.
š„ Why I Still Write
Despite all this, Iām not giving up.
Because clarityāeven without guaranteed solutionsāis better than unconscious submission.
This book, and my journey, is a refusal to sleepwalk.If I can wake upāand help others do the sameāthen maybe, just maybe, we can interrupt the script.
Even if we can’t rewrite the whole play, at least weāll stop playing along with the worst parts.š¬ Final Thought
This is where all my thinking begins.
Every chapter that follows is rooted in this refusalāthis need to ask deeper questions about the condition weāve inherited and the freedom weāre told we have.