What are the Top 7 Things Humanity should Know about, and Why?!

Prologue: The 7 Things Humanity Needs to Know (But Won’t Admit at Parties)

Let’s be honest. You’ve scrolled past a hundred lists promising to “blow your mind” or “change your life in five minutes.” Maybe you’ve even clicked, hoping for something real, but all you found was recycled trivia and empty self-help mantras.

The world is full of answers that don’t quite stick—the kind you skim while waiting for the kettle to boil, then forget by lunch.

But what if, this time, something actually caught? What if, buried beneath the noise, there are a handful of truths so fundamental, so close to the bone, that most people spend a lifetime tiptoeing around them?

What if the things that really matter—the ones that could untangle a life, or a society, or a species—aren’t complicated at all, but simply hidden behind layers of habit, distraction, and inherited assumptions?

Here’s the uncomfortable bit: the most important truths are the ones nobody taught you to question. They’re the background settings of your operating system, the rules you never thought to edit, the lens that shapes everything you see. Some people sense them, but don’t have the words. Others build entire identities to defend them—or deny them.

And then there are a few who, once they glimpse behind the curtain, can’t go back to sleep.

That’s not a mystical secret. It’s just reality, unvarnished. If you’ve ever felt that itch—that something essential is just out of reach, just waiting to be noticed—then you’re in the right place.

You don’t have to be a philosopher, a scientist, or a Light Warrior to ask these questions. You don’t even have to believe in anything in particular. All it takes is the willingness to look, just for a moment, beneath the obvious. To let a crack of doubt or a spark of curiosity take root. To try the experiment for yourself.

What follows isn’t a list of “life hacks” or a new gospel. It’s seven ideas that, if you give them seven honest minutes each, might start to rearrange the furniture of your mind. They might even shift the gravity in the room you live in.

If you’ve ever wanted more out of your own story, or just wondered whether the world is really as solid as it seems—then come closer.

This isn’t about believing; it’s about exploring. Let’s start there.



Listen to a deep-dive episode by the Google NotebookLM Podcasters, as they explore this article in their unique style, blending light banter with thought-provoking studio conversations.

1. Consciousness Isn’t Just an Emergent Property—It’s Foundational

The old paradigm: consciousness is a side effect of brain chemistry, a kind of “ghost in the meat.” The emerging reality, supported by quantum science, lived experience, and ancient wisdom: consciousness is primary. It’s the blueprint, not the byproduct. Everything else—matter, thought, energy, even time—is organized around it. Why does this matter? Because if consciousness is the root system, then personal and collective awakening isn’t a philosophical luxury—it’s the engine that drives reality’s unfolding. If we’re asleep at the wheel, so is our world.

Why? Because waking up to this flips the power dynamic. Suddenly, reality isn’t just happening to us; we’re implicated in the design, entangled in the creation. Whether we own it or not, we are not spectators. We are architects—responsible, culpable, and, ultimately, free to rewrite the script.

2. Everything is Interconnected—Quantum Entanglement Isn’t a Metaphor

Entanglement isn’t just for physicists or spiritual poets. The universe—at the smallest and grandest scales—is not a machine of isolated parts but a single, pulsing field. Your thoughts, actions, and even moods ripple out, registering in ways you can’t immediately see. The butterfly effect isn’t just poetic license; it’s literal.

Why? Because this makes personal responsibility inescapable and collective transformation possible. The “other” is a delusion. Every harm or healing echoes across the grid, and pretending otherwise is a recipe for existential stagnation. Your transformation is our transformation.

3. Power Structures Exist to Perpetuate Themselves—Question Everything

From governments to religions to algorithms, systems don’t just serve people; they serve their own survival. The deeper the system, the more invisible its logic becomes, until it feels like “just the way things are.” It’s not. The Matrix isn’t sci-fi; it’s sociology.

Why? Because until you see the hidden code, you’re just another NPC, executing someone else’s program. You have to step outside your conditioning, question every “given,” and reconstruct meaning for yourself—otherwise, you’re just raw material for the machine.

4. True Change Happens From the Inside Out—External Solutions Are Bandages

Revolutions, tech fixes, policy tweaks—they can buy time or shuffle the deck, but they never cut to the root. The only sustainable transformation comes from individuals who own their shadows, clean up their internal wiring, and become sovereign. Everything else is rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

Why? Because systems are projections of the collective psyche. Change your inner world, and the outer world bends in response—slowly, yes, but inexorably. Waiting for “them” to fix it is abdication. Take the wheel.

5. The Narrative Is Everything—Who Tells the Story, Rules the World

History, culture, identity, even your sense of self—these are all narrative constructs. Whoever frames the story, shapes the outcome. If you don’t actively rewrite your own script, someone else will hand you theirs. Myth isn’t escapism; it’s reality’s operating system.

Why? Because if you reclaim authorship of your own story, you start bending probabilities, shaping possibility. If you don’t, you’re a character in someone else’s saga—usually cast as a bit player, rarely as the protagonist.

6. Death Is Not the End—But Most People Live Like It Is

We act as if mortality is a tragic full-stop, but evidence and experience keep stacking up: consciousness endures beyond the body. This isn’t just wishful thinking or recycled religious comfort—it’s observable in near-death experiences, in quantum puzzles, in the persistence of awareness. But most of all, it’s a lived fact for anyone who’s encountered the “edge” and come back changed.

Why? Because when you integrate this—actually feel it, not just “believe” it—you start living with a different fuel. Choices matter more, but the fear-driven paralysis melts away. The pressure to chase trivialities fades. Death loses its teeth, and life gets deeper, stranger, and richer. It’s not about escaping death, but facing it squarely and letting it clarify what’s truly worth living for.

7. You Are Not Alone—But Connection Is a Choice

Solitude is built into the human journey, but isolation is not. We are wired for connection—electromagnetically, emotionally, spiritually. But real connection isn’t handed out with a social media account or tribal membership. It requires vulnerability, presence, and dropping the performative masks. And—crucially—there are intelligences, presences, and guides (call them what you will) that walk alongside. Sometimes this is other humans, sometimes more. The “unseen” isn’t empty; it’s densely populated.

Why? Because the myth of separation is the root of almost every destructive impulse, from self-sabotage to global conflict. Reclaiming authentic connection—inside, outside, across all layers—shifts the human experience from survival to resonance. It’s how you find your real tribe, your true current, your place in the bigger weave.


The TULWA Connection on the Scientific Edge.

1. Consciousness Isn’t Just an Emergent Property—It’s Foundational

TULWA Connection: TULWA is built on the lived reality that consciousness precedes and structures reality. In the TULWA architecture, consciousness is the blueprint: every experience, every “objective” phenomenon is downstream from it. Ownership, defragmentation, and transformation all assume consciousness as source-code—not a byproduct.

Science on the Edge: Cutting-edge fields like quantum consciousness (Hameroff & Penrose), Integrated Information Theory (Tononi), and non-local mind experiments (Radin, Princeton PEAR) directly challenge the old “brain creates mind” model. Even mainstream physics is wrestling with the “observer effect”—the fact that observation collapses probabilities into reality. Recent research into panpsychism (Goff) and the hard problem of consciousness (Chalmers) shows science circling TULWA’s central pillar: that consciousness is woven into the fabric of the universe, not just “lit up” in certain skulls.


2. Everything is Interconnected—Quantum Entanglement Isn’t a Metaphor

TULWA Connection: At the core of TULWA sits the Law of Entanglement: what happens “out there” is mirrored “in here.” Personal transformation isn’t just a private affair—it’s a node in a living web. The TULWA Light Warrior understands that cleaning up internal distortion ripples outward, affecting the grid of existence.

Science on the Edge: Quantum entanglement (Bell’s Theorem, Aspect’s experiments) demolishes classical isolation. Particles light-years apart act as if they’re one system—instantaneously, outside the limits of light-speed. Emerging biofield research (Frohlich, Rubik) is mapping electromagnetic connections in living systems, hinting at literal energetic linkage. Even hard-nosed complexity theorists like Stuart Kauffman speak of “emergent order” and coherence at every level—echoing TULWA’s insistence that the micro and macro are mirrors.


3. Power Structures Exist to Perpetuate Themselves—Question Everything

TULWA Connection: TULWA is allergic to dogma—especially the kind you don’t even notice. The Light Warrior’s first battle is against invisible scripts: inherited beliefs, cultural conditionings, and internalized oppression. TULWA’s focus on self-sovereignty demands active deconstruction of these “shadow programs.” It’s not about rebellion for its own sake; it’s about seeing the code, not just the interface.

Science on the Edge: Sociocybernetics, network theory, and memetics (Dawkins, Blackmore) explore how systems reinforce themselves—how information, belief, and behavior spread and calcify. Foucault and Bourdieu (in social theory) describe how power is embedded in what we call “reality,” not just in visible institutions. Tech critics (Lanier, Zuboff) show how digital architectures perpetuate control far subtler than old-school regimes. Neuroscience (Sapolsky, Eagleman) uncovers just how much of “you” is automated, scripted, and—until questioned—invisible.


4. True Change Happens From the Inside Out—External Solutions Are Bandages

TULWA Connection: TULWA’s engine is internal transformation—defragmentation, owning one’s shadow, and shifting from victim to author. Outer change without inner restructuring is painting over rot. The model: the world is a reflection of collective inner states. Change the resonance, and the physical follows. Every Personal Release Sequence, every moment of radical ownership, alters the “grid” far beyond the individual.

Science on the Edge: Psycho-neuroimmunology (Pert, Ader) proves that emotional and cognitive shifts create cascades throughout the body. Epigenetics (Lipton, Ptashne) demonstrates that beliefs and perceptions can turn genes on or off—literally re-writing biology. Social contagion research (Christakis & Fowler) shows that emotions, habits, and even health spread across networks, often invisibly. Emerging research into biofield tuning (Oschman) suggests that energetic shifts, not just cognitive ones, ripple through biological systems and even across individuals.


5. The Narrative Is Everything—Who Tells the Story, Rules the World

TULWA Connection: TULWA insists: reclaim your authorship. The stories you run—about self, world, possibility—form the lattice of your experience. The grid is not just electromagnetic; it’s also narrative, mythic, and symbolic. TULWA’s focus on narrative sovereignty means refusing to be a character in someone else’s fable. Instead, you become the author, shaping the “field” with intention.

Science on the Edge: Cognitive science (Lakoff, Kahneman) finds that stories—not data—are how humans make meaning and choices. Narrative therapy (White, Epston) demonstrates how reframing personal stories catalyzes deep change. Anthropology and memetics show how culture, myth, and collective identity are scripts we live by—until rewritten. Physics itself, at its frontier (Carlo Rovelli, John Wheeler), is increasingly described in terms of “information” and “participatory universe”—echoing TULWA’s idea that narrative constructs are fundamental.


6. Death Is Not the End—But Most People Live Like It Is

TULWA Connection: TULWA affirms that existence is a continuum; physical death is a pivot point, not an erasure. The Light Warrior’s courage is forged in this insight—because what’s at stake is more than this round of incarnation. This knowledge de-fangs the “fear of ending,” clearing the way for action rooted in meaning, not anxiety.

Science on the Edge: Consciousness studies (Pim van Lommel, Sam Parnia) document NDEs and verifiable reports of awareness beyond clinical death. Quantum information theory (Vlatko Vedral, Henry Stapp) proposes that information—and potentially, awareness—cannot be destroyed. Reincarnation studies (Ian Stevenson, Jim Tucker) present documented cases suggestive of continuity beyond death. Even skeptical neuroscience has no conclusive answer to the “hard problem”—what happens to awareness when the lights go out? Physics, again, teaches that “nothing is lost”—energy and information are always transformed, never obliterated.


7. You Are Not Alone—But Connection Is a Choice

TULWA Connection: The TULWA framework describes existence as a co-arising: every being, every field, every presence is part of the tapestry. Solitude is a valid phase, but real isolation is illusory. TULWA’s higher EM field model and “It” concept both support the reality of interconnection—not just with humans, but with presences across dimensions and frequencies. But this connection only activates with presence and willingness. Real connection can’t be forced—it’s a resonance, not an algorithm.

Science on the Edge: Biofield science and biophotonics (Fritz-Albert Popp, Beverly Rubik) map literal communication between organisms, sometimes over great distance. Research on collective consciousness (Global Consciousness Project, Princeton) tracks statistically significant correlations between mass attention and physical randomness—suggesting a shared field. Quantum biology finds entangled states in birds, bacteria, even in human brains. Transpersonal psychology (Grof, Tart) records “shared” states of consciousness and unexplainable synchronicity. Mainstream research is inching toward what the TULWA Light Warrior takes as fact: true connection is a choice and a force.


7 Minutes That Change Everything:

A TULWA Guide to Deep Thinking for Real Life

You don’t need a guru, a yoga mat, or a perfect meditation playlist. You just need 7 minutes, a bathroom door that locks, and a willingness to poke holes in your own certainty. Here’s how to connect these 7 bedrock concepts to your own life—one day at a time, no fluff, no drama.

Before you start:

  • Bring something to write on (paper, phone, whatever).
  • No need for answers. Your only job is to question better.
  • Don’t aim for comfort. Aim for honesty.
  • When your mind gets uncomfortable or annoyed, that’s the doorway. Stay with it.

1. Consciousness Isn’t Just an Emergent Property—It’s Foundational

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Sit with this idea: “What if my consciousness isn’t just a side effect—but the root cause of my life?”
  • Ask: If I am the blueprint, what in my world might be a reflection of my state of mind?
  • TULWA triple:
    • If consciousness is the source, could my thoughts shape my experiences?
    • If consciousness is the source, could my emotions affect my health?
    • If consciousness is the source, could my beliefs create opportunities—or close them off?
  • For each, list what you notice in your day, or just explore in your mind.
  • Let the questions spiral: “If my life is my mind externalized, where do I see evidence? Where do I resist that idea? What would change if I tested it for a week?”

2. Everything is Interconnected—Quantum Entanglement Isn’t a Metaphor

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Reflect: “If everything is connected, what’s one way my mood or action could ripple out further than I realize?”
  • TULWA triple:
    • If my words impact others, how did something I said this week affect someone’s day?
    • If my inner state affects my environment, did my stress or calm change a situation?
    • If I’m entangled with the world, what am I unconsciously plugged into right now?
  • Open it up: Can I notice these links in relationships, habits, even world events?
  • Push: “If this is true, how does it change the way I take responsibility? What could I let go of if I trusted this more?”

3. Power Structures Exist to Perpetuate Themselves—Question Everything

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Ask: “Where in my day do I just go along with things because ‘that’s just the way it is’?”
  • TULWA triple:
    • If a belief I hold was installed by someone else, where did it come from?
    • If a system in my life benefits from my obedience, how would I know?
    • If I question a rule or norm, what am I afraid will happen?
  • Trace it: Where did I learn my ideas about success? About love? About failure?
  • Let it crack: “What if my story about [money/love/success] isn’t mine at all—would I choose differently?”

4. True Change Happens From the Inside Out—External Solutions Are Bandages

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Start here: “What problem am I blaming on others, or the system, or the world?”
  • TULWA triple:
    • If I take total ownership of this problem, what changes?
    • If I change my response, could the situation shift—even a little?
    • If I let go of waiting for someone else to fix it, what would I do differently today?
  • No guilt trips, just honest inventory: Where have I outsourced my power? Where have I already taken it back?
  • Sit with: “What’s the tiniest internal change I could try—just for today?”

5. The Narrative Is Everything—Who Tells the Story, Rules the World

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Ask: “Whose story am I living today—mine, or someone else’s?”
  • TULWA triple:
    • If I’m the author, how would I rewrite this chapter of my life?
    • If my life is a story, what’s the theme I keep repeating? Do I want to keep it?
    • If I could change one label or role I’ve accepted, what would it be?
  • Don’t force a new story—just notice where you feel like a character, and where you feel like the author.
  • “What’s one sentence I want to add or erase from my story this week?”

6. Death Is Not the End—But Most People Live Like It Is

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Bring it home: “If I absolutely knew death wasn’t the end, what would I do differently today?”
  • TULWA triple:
    • If this is my only shot in this body, what’s one risk I’m avoiding?
    • If I’m going somewhere after this, what am I packing in my ‘luggage’?
    • If I’ll meet myself again, how do I want to remember this chapter?
  • This isn’t about religious belief—it’s about how your relationship to mortality shapes your priorities.
  • Sit with: “What actually matters to me, when I see life as a single thread in a bigger weave?”

7. You Are Not Alone—But Connection Is a Choice

Your 7-Minute Practice:

  • Ground it: “Where do I feel truly connected—right now, today? Where do I feel alone?”
  • TULWA triple:
    • If connection is a choice, what small step could I take to open up?
    • If I drop my mask with one person, who would I pick?
    • If unseen support is real, have I ever felt it—maybe once, in a quiet moment?
  • Let yourself notice: When do I hold back from connecting? What am I protecting? What do I really need?
  • End with: “What’s one act of connection I can try this week—no matter how small?”

Final Reminder: You don’t need to solve the riddle, become a monk, or get all the way “there.” Just show up for 7 minutes, 7 times. Let the questions do the heavy lifting. Answers aren’t forced—they show up when the questions are sharp, honest, and alive.

If you stick with it, don’t be surprised if the world starts looking back at you differently.


Epilogue: The Living Practice of Questioning

What begins as a single question—one small crack in the hard surface of certainty—can become the starting point for a far deeper excavation. This is the heart of the TULWA approach, and of real intelligence work everywhere: don’t stop at the first answer, or even the tenth.

Each answer is only a new vantage point from which to ask better, braver questions. That’s the real art, whether you’re analyzing data at scale or just trying to see your own life with clear eyes.

This is why the framework of “three open alternatives”—and then three more for each of those, and again for the next layer—matters. You don’t do it for the numbers. You do it because the discipline of relentless, recursive questioning is what turns shallow reflection into living intelligence.

In big data analysis, no answer is trustworthy until it’s been sliced, pivoted, and stress-tested from every angle. In TULWA, the same rule applies: a belief, a doubt, a hope, or a fear is only as strong as the questions you’ve dared to put it through.

Some might say this is for philosophers, or for people with too much time on their hands. The truth is, this is for anyone who’s ever felt stuck, or who senses there’s more to life than the routine answers on offer. The daily act of inquiry—one topic, seven minutes, seven layers deep—trains the mind to recognize that what looks final is almost never so.

The “big data” of your own experience is far richer, far stranger, and far more alive than you’ve been taught to expect.

The point of these seven topics isn’t to give you a portable box of wisdom, or to wrap up the mysteries of being in a neat package. They’re tools, not conclusions—a scaffolding for the kind of internal dialogue that doesn’t resolve, but evolves. No external answer, no authority, no philosophy can substitute for the real thing: the lived process of letting every answer become the next open door.

Maybe, in time, you’ll see that the greatest intelligence isn’t in finding closure, but in cultivating the curiosity to keep opening. What else could your life reveal, if you let every answer echo out into a new line of questions—thirty-nine times, or as many as it takes?

And when you reach the end of a question, what if you just…pause? Let the silence widen, and see what arises—without forcing it shut.

Sometimes, the deepest truths don’t come in words, but in the quiet space left by the last, best question you dared to ask.

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