Through our eyes

We tend to reproduce what we see, and we tend to want what we are shown.

This sounds obvious, but it’s precisely why marketing works so well: the more you are presented with a product, the more unconsciously familiar it becomes—and eventually, you’ll want it for yourself.

What if, instead, society promoted a lifestyle that is more humble, simple, and honest?

We are deep into a time when resilience—and wanting and owning less—should become the obvious way to live, especially when we consider the depletion of resources and the state of the climate.

This is particularly true in the wealthiest countries.

Unless we recognize the urgent need to create a balance between how we treat resources and nature, the situation will only become more and more complicated.

Maybe not so much for those reading these lines in 2025.

But what about your children? And their children?

The future is not in front of our eyes.

And that’s why we so easily forget about it.

Want to share?


Comments

Leave a Reply


Our latest tales

  • Feeling the Impermanence of Time

    Feeling the Impermanence of Time

    If there was one thing the Espers were not made for, it was to feel the impermanence of time. Whether it concerned the past or the future, everything that is not the present or close to it quickly becomes abstract, taking shape through stories. These stories are then shaped by their experience, lived or learned,…

    Read more

  • Acting in Concert

    Acting in Concert

    For Esperia, this was the discovery of the StarDust, revealed to all at the end of the Chaos War, which had been the trigger for the Espers to finally act in concert. Indeed, for years, despite technological progress and even learning to use magic, which had made many tedious tasks child’s play, the inertia of…

    Read more

  • Obligations and Emotions

    Obligations and Emotions

    The Espers were not the only creatures on their planet endowed with consciousness; animals or even plants had evolved to develop it as well. Vingel was a creature that resembled a small dog. After the loss of his mother, he had fallen into despair, and had not realized that he had gradually lost the ability…

    Read more

  • Mental Discipline

    Mental Discipline

    If some saw the rigor of a daily training of the mind as a limitation to their freedom, Kenko, the Shape of Health, often reminded them that good health was not only physical, but also in the mind. Thus, to rebuild Esperia on healthier foundations, it was also necessary to rethink the foundations of a…

    Read more

  • A Broader Vision

    A Broader Vision

    Simba was a little monkey who lived on the margins of the society of Esperia. Although he was not an Esper, he too had developed a consciousness and had learned the five languages of the different elements. Seeing the world from a different perspective, he often wondered why a broader vision had still not yet…

    Read more

  • Shared Prosperity

    Shared Prosperity

    Cha Cha, Guruko’s little platypus companion, continued to reflect and write every day. His journey so far had been rather chaotic, but it was precisely what had allowed him to develop his current vision of the world as a whole. He had grown up in the country of the lightning element, but both of his…

    Read more

  • Good Advice Is Difficult to Hear

    Good Advice Is Difficult to Hear

    Rebuilding Esperia on foundations that were fair for everyone, while also keeping harmony with nature in mind, was an extremely complicated task. The Seven Shapes understood this well, and they knew that their advice would be difficult for many Espers to hear, as they were still attached to the ease of their past lives, which…

    Read more

  • Advantages and Disadvantages

    Advantages and Disadvantages

    The dreadful truth that had revealed itself to all the Espers at the end of the War of Chaos was difficult for many of them to accept: the use of magic now had to be subject to major restrictions, because each use consumed a part of the planet’s life source. Until then, in a thoughtless…

    Read more