
Tending to I(Perception), YOU(Why), Us(Interconnectedness)
There’s a world we’re stepping into—no longer ruled solely by numbers in a bank account or likes on a screen, but by depth, presence, and integration across all layers of our being.
As I continue my journey through different frequencies of reality, I find myself observing both ends of the spectrum—those living in material scarcity and those surrounded by wealth. But what’s rising to the surface isn’t just the contrast between the two—it’s the unseen commonalities. The subtle textures of emotional, spiritual, and energetic poverty and richness that live beneath the obvious.
We often overestimate the physical and underestimate everything else. And I get it. I had to believe I was poor in some areas just to build the resilience necessary to remember I’ve always been abundant in all.
It’s not a competition. It’s not even a hierarchy. It’s a web. A grid of experience we each walk through with our own set of blindfolds and breakthroughs.
🌀 What if abundance isn’t about having more—but about being able to feel, think, and connect deeper?
In this new paradigm, the question is no longer “Do I have enough?” but:
- What plane does this open for me—physical, emotional, mental, spiritual?
- How can I use this moment to connect and realign all planes within myself?
- Can I receive richness where I used to only perceive lack?
Because wealth and poverty show up everywhere:
- In material things—yes—but also in our algorithms, our attention, our relationships.
- In poor content circulating online—like subliminally self-harming videos disguised as “entertainment.”
- In poor conversations that drain, not nourish.
- In an abundance of emotions that have no safe container.
- In intelligent minds trapped in scarcity because no one ever taught them how to build what they imagine.
The point of this blog is not to shame wealth or glorify poverty. It’s to reframe abundance as something much deeper, and to prepare hearts for the kind of world we’re co-creating.
Let’s take a deeper look, together.
🌑 1. Emptiness in a World of Excess
Wealth lens:
When everything is available, nothing feels sacred. The nervous system becomes numb from overindulgence, pleasure loses its pulse, and joy becomes elusive.
Poverty lens:
When everything is unavailable, sacredness is everywhere. A warm cup of tea, a stranger’s smile, or a moment of peace can feel like gold. But the system often becomes overstimulated by survival, making it hard to enjoy what is there.
📖 Both reveal how contrast gives texture to life. True richness is the ability to feel.
🌒 2. Loneliness at the Top
Wealth lens:
Surrounded by people, yet unseen. Every interaction is a transaction, trust is a currency few can afford.
Poverty lens:
Isolated from systems that support or understand you. Emotional needs often buried beneath survival. The heart longs not just for resources, but for recognition.
📖 Loneliness doesn’t discriminate—it simply takes different disguises.
🌓 3. Inherited Burdens, Not Just Blessings
Wealth lens:
Legacy can be a prison. The pressure to uphold family names, reputations, or fortunes suffocates authenticity.
Poverty lens:
Legacy can be a wound. Generational trauma, unhealed narratives of lack, and ancestral grief often inherited without guidance or tools.
📖 We all carry something that isn’t ours—until we choose to alchemize it.
🌔 4. Disconnection from Reality (and Self)
Wealth lens:
Comfort becomes disconnection. Everything can be outsourced—meals, problems, presence. But no one can feel for you. No one can face the mirror on your behalf.
Poverty lens:
Struggle becomes a form of dissociation. Constant fight-or-flight disconnects you from your intuition and self-worth. You forget what it’s like to rest in yourself.
📖 The truest form of safety is internal. Without it, both ends lose access to meaning.
🌕 5. The Guilt of Having While Others Suffer
Wealth lens:
“How do I enjoy my life when so many are struggling?” becomes a spiritual crisis. Guilt turns to shame. Avoidance follows.
Poverty lens:
“How do I dream beyond survival?” becomes a psychological block. Guilt for wanting more, shame for not having enough.
📖 The medicine lies in reciprocity—not guilt, not pity. Let’s lift each other.
🌖 6. The Pressure of Being “The One Who Made It”
Wealth lens:
Success can isolate. You’re not allowed to break down. You become a symbol of achievement, not a person.
Poverty lens:
You carry the pressure of being “the one who has to break the cycle.” It’s exhausting. You’re expected to rise above without the scaffolding others inherited.
📖 In both cases, visibility is a weight few are trained to carry.
🌗 7. The Crisis of Meaning
Wealth lens:
When survival is no longer a goal, existential questions rise. But there’s no map for meaning in a system that only taught consumption.
Poverty lens:
Meaning often comes from the unseen—the spiritual, the intuitive. But survival can cloud the ability to sustain it in daily life.
📖 Meaning is the ultimate wealth—but you must have access to time, safety, and reflection to claim it.
🌀 Final Words: A Guiding Framework for the Future
The world we’re entering is asking more from us. Not just more money, more time, or more skill—but more integration.
The question we must begin asking, always:
“Which plane is this expanding for me?”
- Emotional? Mental? Physical? Energetic?
And then,
“How do I connect this plane to the others so my wealth becomes whole?”
That is the essence of real abundance.
We’re all rich.
And we’ve all known lack.
But now we’re remembering how to align them all—
So we can become the wealth we once chased.

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