Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Saying it out loud

 

 

Saying it out loud

Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards

Søren Kierkegaard

I. Parallel Histories

The history of a person is not so different from the history of the world. In both, experiences and events repeat themselves, and each repetition carries something to be learned.

Some people surrender to the comfort of delusional myths that fill the gaps of ignorance and calm their anxieties. Others challenge those myths once their instructive power has been exhausted and expose themselves to the vast expanse of the knowable unknown. Neither path is without cost. They are different ways of standing before reality.

The tragedy is that not everyone is willing — or able — to distinguish between inherited myths and claims of fact that can be tested against reality. Some remain inside their tribal or cultural bubble, unaware of the wider human landscape of diverse cultural worlds. Others break free to explore that landscape, receiving from it and giving to it in return.

Inside the insulated bubble, there often arises the conviction of being chosen to occupy the whole landscape. Outside the broken bubble, there may emerge a feeling of freedom from tribal restrictions, a sense of belonging to a greater living whole, and a sobering realization of one’s relative smallness.

With these thoughts, I found myself drawn into reflection — neither by choice nor by chance, but through the unsettling convergence of events: the subservient political surrender of the United States to Zionist Israel; the unrelenting killing of Palestinian, Iranian, and Lebanese civilians; the Russo-Ukrainian War; the Sudanese Civil War; the Myanmar Civil War; and many other conflicts unfolding across the world. Alongside them came a more intimate mourning: the loss of friendships I had long believed to be authentic, solid, and humanly irreplaceable.

Life is a constant trade-off. With every decision, every choice, something is gained and something is lost. With age, after passing through many peaks and valleys of experience, I have become increasingly minimalist — not so much in relation to possessions as in how honestly I relate to others, and in how carefully I choose what deserves my time, attention, and emotional energy.

As my social fears, self-consciousness, and need for conformity receded, many other fears receded with them. In their place, I felt the rise of a new kind of courage: the courage to speak my mind on controversial issues, whether local or distant; to recognize my own biases as well as those of others; to get as close to the truth as I can; and to enter relationships truthfully, without fear of rejection, loss, disapproval, or the external approval that once mattered more to me.

The Shelf Life of Hegemonic Power

Unlike civilizations, which unfold in archaeological time, hegemonic powers move in historical time. Their dominance often collapses through a combination of internal decay, economic overreach, and external pressure from rising rivals and resistant subjects. What follows is usually not a single blow, but a cycle of declining legitimacy, military overextension, and economic imbalance, until failure spreads through the system with a kind of domino effect.

For historian and author, Jared Diamond (Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed), collapse begins when a society weakens its own foundations and then proves unable—or unwilling—to change course before crisis becomes irreversible. Sallust, the Roman historian who chronicled the corruption of the late Republic in works such as The Jugurthine War, saw political collapse as something sprung from within by greed, incompetence, and the decay of public virtue. The Mahabharata, the vast Indian epic of the struggle between the Kauravas and the Pandavas, traces another path to ruin: not luxury in the Roman sense, but dynastic obsession, envy, and a disastrous will to possess what ought not be possessed. Taken together, they form a paired moral anatomy of decline. One warns against corruption and luxury; the other against rivalry and unrestrained ambition. Both suggest that a political order may continue to stand outwardly even as it is already disintegrating inwardly.

June 10, 2026

Albert Halac | Intercultural Facilitation LLC

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