Why Life Appears to Be Competitive
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In this transmission, the commonly accepted belief that life is inherently competitive is examined through a different lens. Rather than being a fundamental feature of reality, competition is revealed as a consequence of insecurity and the perception that security exists outside the individual. Exploring the distinction between fear and love, scarcity and possibility, this transmission uncovers why humanity experiences life as a race for things, status, and outcomes, and how the need to compete emerges the moment security appears external. It reveals that competition is not the cause of human struggle, but the symptom of a deeper misunderstanding about the nature of security, freedom, and the purpose of experience itself.
To understand the structural architecture behind the correction, why it is unfolding, why it is irreversible, and why it is not a philosophy but a governing structure, it is mapped in the book: The Meaning Of Life.