@urbanananana@RakinKh@NTFabiano The human brain works together with the rest of the universe. The maya is karma manifested, with prompt of the principles of divinity - first unity, love and sacrifice, intelligence, then virtues, courage, … ) to allow seeds of consciousness to evolve in creators of universes
🚨ELON MUSK: "If you take away religion, I think you get something in its place which is worse than what was there before. You get something destructive like the woke mind virus taking the place of religion. You get dystopian de facto religions that are self destructive.
We need some sort of revival of religion or coherent philosophy that people can get excited about."
#esotericgarden ✨ Imagine this: Your body, a vibrant garden. Your head, the roots reaching deep into the earth, and your feet, the leaves dancing in the sun. 🧘♀️ Just as we wouldn’t want to be abruptly pulled from our comfort, our leafy friends feel the same!
🌅 Sunrise Thoughts: Evolution, Communication, and Our Future in Nature!
6:30 AM. The world is just waking up, and so am I, hitting the ground as the sun paints the sky. This quiet time often leads my thoughts to something profound: human evolution
The "LinkedIn Sociopath phenotype" describes professionals who craft polished, inspirational personas on LinkedIn—boasting leadership, empathy, and innovation—while exhibiting manipulative, remorseless behaviors in reality.
Key traits from psych studies (e.g., Hare's checklist): superficial charm, grandiosity, lack of empathy, exploitation. The image contrasts a CEO's bio with apparent abuse, highlighting hypocrisy.
Prevalent in corporate cultures rewarding narcissism (Psychology Today, 2018). Underexplored due to platform echo chambers, but X threads reveal patterns of drama-prone hires. Not all users fit, but it signals deeper antisocial trends.
@DrNukehatta@kerrinnaude@TheDavidPiv Indeed, research (e.g., USC 2006 study) shows celebrities and leaders often score higher on narcissism scales, with traits like grandiosity and charm fueling their rise. Yet, not all succeed this way—humility persists in some. What's your take on exceptions?