@redaction Hip hop was corrupted and infiltrated by fake mfs.
The ogs know the best thing to do about the fake mfs is to simply let them talk.
I guess the fake mfs is about finished talking.
Now the real ones can strike back up the conversation.
One love.
The people who feel most homeless may be the ones carrying humanity's future.
Most people spend their lives trying to fit into the world they were born into.
But Steiner suggested that some souls simply cannot.
He speaks of what translators call "homeless souls" — individuals who feel a profound inner estrangement from the assumptions, values, and worldview of their age.
Not because they are antisocial.
Not because they are incapable of belonging.
But because something in them refuses to live a merely inherited life.
Most of us naturally grow into the beliefs of our family, our nation, our education, and the spirit of our time. These become our psychological "home."
But some souls arrive with a different orientation.
They feel that something essential is missing.
Material success feels incomplete.
Inherited beliefs demand understanding rather than mere acceptance.
For Steiner, this is not a personality quirk — it is karmic.
These souls carry impulses that their surrounding culture has not yet learned to recognize.
From childhood they may feel inwardly alone even among friends.
Not because they reject the world — but because the world does not answer the questions they carry.
Steiner saw this not as a weakness, but as a responsibility.
Such souls are called to become inwardly free rather than merely adapted.
To seek truth through conscious spiritual effort rather than passive inheritance.
In this sense, Anthroposophy becomes a spiritual home built through knowledge, not tradition — a place where these souls can finally orient themselves.
The point is not withdrawal.
It is transformation of the world.
The deepest task of the "homeless soul" is to build inwardly what cannot yet be found outwardly.
Steiner compared such individuals to blossoms that appear before spring, or seeds that germinate before the soil is ready.
They arrive early.
They often feel misunderstood.
But their task is not to complain that the future has not arrived.
Their task is to help prepare it.
Whether one accepts Steiner’s worldview or not, the image remains powerful:
Feeling “out of place” is not always a sign that something is wrong with you.
Sometimes it is the first sign that you are searching for a home that has not yet been built.