Collapse Is Necessary For Rebirth

People generally don’t want to accept that change requires experiencing breakdowns. Perhaps they consider the price of development too high to “pay.” But the truth is, this is inevitable if the change is to last beyond a single day.

In essence, we only truly grow or change when an outdated program loses its validity within us, when we recognize its inadequacy. Every such instance involves some degree of loss, some level of collapse.

Programs have significance in our lives, but generally speaking, the more someone is “driven by programs,” the more they operate routinely. The more we free ourselves from these programs, the more creative we become, the more present we can be in life, and the more capable we are of actually thinking.

Breaking free from programs is not a simple task because the ego (as the sum of these programs) does everything to protect them.

For example, they manifest in our lives as beliefs such as:
If you study hard or work a lot, you’ll get rich.
If you eat less, you’ll lose weight.
You have to give to receive.
If you go out with wet hair in the cold, you’ll get meningitis.
You’re not achieving your goal because you’re not positive enough.
We fear the unknown… etc.

In our daily lives, we constantly repeat numerous learned beliefs that hinder us from moving forward. Some come from education, others from the media or famous people, or they’re proverbs and clichés we chant without knowing why, accepting them as truth. This closes off the possibility of discovering what is actually true—or at least closer to it.

Why is this impossible without a breakdown?

Because we fiercely defend our convictions and beliefs (our programs), as they represent safety and survival for us.

To take a relevant example from the natural biological laws: microorganisms are our allies, present in conditions depending on germ layers, aiding regeneration processes.
This is a straightforward concept, easy to understand if one takes the time to study the biological natural laws.

Do we think most doctors don’t understand this because they’re foolish or malicious?

No, doctors are neither stupid nor evil—they’re proud.

Most are content with the knowledge they have, and the last thing they want is for “external” information to infiltrate their consciousness, disrupting their sense of security and well-functioning lives.

The academic perspective preferred by doctors —something they also try to force into the average person’s everyday life— is deeply ingrained in them, because they’ve spent far more time studying it, taken countless exams on it, and their lives depended far more on the curriculum and their ability to recite it correctly.

Teaching and learning work much like dog training. On one hand, if the dog sits on command, it gets a treat—its desires are fulfilled by following certain steps. On the other hand, if it behaves undesirably, it faces scolding or pain.

Naturally, both dogs and humans crave the experience of approval while doing everything to avoid pain.

These lessons don’t necessarily come from a classroom but occur naturally in life’s small moments.

For example, as children, we see our parents fear or warn us about “diseases” and “pathogens,” so we adopt this “habit” and view them as enemies (for our survival).
As children, we see our parents defer to doctors, so we adopt this behavior.
As children, we see the media dominate our parents, so we submit to it as well.
If our parents are doctors, the belief is practically in our blood, and since Mom and Dad are part of us, their words become sacred against the outside world.
Then, in school and university, aspiring to become doctors, we learn to recite everything word-for-word to fulfill our desires, because failing to do so brings loss or jeopardizes our current position.

After years of study, we become utterly convinced that what we learned is the truth, the good, the correct, reinforced by hundreds or thousands of affirmations.
Add to that our pride in enduring five to ten years of rigorous programming—how could we take seriously someone who hasn’t gone through it or, worse, claims the opposite of what’s enshrined in academic literature?

Now, a dog can be trained to attack or bite someone, or it can be trained to be kind and friendly.
So, studying something for a long time doesn’t mean we “know” anything about the subject (in any field) or that it aligns with reality.

For doctors, the learned programming often shifts when they see in practice that most treatments are anti-life, and the “beliefs” they learned are repeatedly debunked in their daily work.

These debunkings are the breakdowns. When they see that the knowledge they memorized for years doesn’t support their work or lives, they start seeking new solutions.

But until all their faith rests in the curriculum, they’ll defend it with every tool at their disposal.

This applies to every area of our lives: the more and longer a program is reinforced in us or by us, the more we cling to it. The longer we delay facing the facts, the more unpleasant the awakening becomes.
A good example of beliefs and awakening is the case of Santa Claus. As children, we easily bought into the idea that Santa watches us and rewards us for being good, all for a few “reward candies.” Later, when a friend or sibling revealed the truth, do we remember how bad it felt? The same happens every time an illusion shatters in our lives or when we face a breakdown in another area. The pain depends on how much we built our lives around it and how much the lost object defined our value.
The more beliefs collapse in our “heads,” the more mature we become, the greater our actual knowledge, and the stronger our ability to think.

 

This text does not aim to be comprehensive; it touches on only part of the topic and serves to understand the biological processes occurring within us and the nature of conflicts. Every person’s life and life path are unique, so the specific triggers should be examined individually, based on the events experienced. How someone copes with their conflicts varies from person to person, and different areas are handled differently depending on the amount of negative experiences or failures accumulated there. Exploring a conflict does not replace medical care.
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