You Can’t Escape Reality

A homeless woman being interviewed said she uses hard drugs to “escape reality.” But drugs don’t create escape. They create drift — the illusion of distance from what’s still there. Reality doesn’t move. Only your lens does. Hard drugs don’t remove her circumstances. They don’t erase her past, her responsibilities, her pain, or the conditions … Read more

How Children Learn Horizontal Alignment With Truth

The Realities of Modern Life Children don’t learn Truth because an adult declares it. They learn Truth when their inner experience and the outer world line up. That matching — that coherence — is what creates horizontal alignment. Horizontal alignment is the child’s nervous system recognizing: “What I feel, what I see, and what happens … Read more

Affair, Denial, and the Avoidance of Truth

The Realities of Modern Life 1. The Affair Isn’t the Core Issue — The Avoidance Is Affairs can come from loneliness, fantasy, entitlement, emotional immaturity, or escape. But the affair itself isn’t the deepest wound. The real destruction begins afterward, when the person refuses to stand in Truth. Statements like: “I don’t regret anything.” “It … Read more

Drift Comes by Choice — And Choice Has Consequences

The Realities of Modern Life Drift doesn’t happen to you. It isn’t fate, bad luck, or some invisible current pulling you off course. Drift is chosen. Quietly. Repeatedly. In small, comfortable, seemingly harmless moments. And every one of those choices has a consequence. The Hidden Choice Behind Drift People rarely say, “I choose to drift.” … Read more

How Parents Teach Drift

The Realities of Modern Life Parents rarely teach drift on purpose. They teach it through small, repeated messages that move a child away from Truth without ever naming the movement. Not because they’re careless. Because they’re human. Drift begins in moments that look harmless: “Stop crying.” “You’re fine.” “Here’s a cookie — go play.” “Don’t … Read more

Drift Starts Early

The Realities of Modern Life Drift doesn’t begin in adulthood. It begins in the smallest moments — long before a person knows what drift is. “Johnny, here’s a cookie. Now go play.” It sounds harmless. It feels normal. But it teaches something structural: Comfort becomes a substitute for clarity. Distraction becomes a substitute for direction. … Read more