The Right Use of Power

April 01, 20267 min read

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– THE PULSE OF NOW –

I recently returned from visiting Rome, where I spent time touring the Vatican, the Colosseum, the Roman Forum, and the many layers of history embedded throughout the city.

What becomes immediately apparent is that Rome is not simply a testament to its own greatness. It is a mosaic of civilizations that came before and after it.

Egyptian obelisks stand prominently in Roman squares, relocated thousands of miles from their place of origin. The Roman pantheon of gods closely mirrors that of ancient Greece, adapted and renamed. The Vatican Museums house an extraordinary collection of artifacts gathered over centuries, many of which originated far beyond Rome’s borders.

What we often celebrate as legacy is, in many cases, the residue of conquest.

And Rome is not unique.

The Incas expanded through conquest. The Mayans and Aztecs did the same. The Spanish conquistadors arrived and dismantled entire civilizations, extracting wealth and resources in the process. In more recent history, global power has consolidated in new forms, most notably through the economic, cultural, and military dominance of the United States following the Second World War.

Across time and geography, the pattern is strikingly consistent.

Civilizations rise by accumulating power. They justify that power. They expand it. And more often than not, they exercise it through domination rather than stewardship.

This is not merely a historical observation. It is a reflection of something humanity has not yet fully mastered.

The right use of power.

Power, in itself, is not the issue. Power amplifies the consciousness of those who wield it. When consciousness is immature, power expresses as control, extraction, and domination. When consciousness is mature, power expresses as responsibility, restraint, and stewardship.

Most civilizations have not crossed that threshold.

When power is not grounded in coherence, it must be sustained through force. And force, by its very nature, is not stable. It requires constant reinforcement. It escalates. It overreaches.

Over time, this imbalance begins to show.

Largesse replaces discipline. Excess replaces proportion. Gluttony, hedonism, and greed become normalized. Debt expands, both materially and morally. The population becomes increasingly anesthetized, pacified by entertainment, stimulation, and consumption, often financed through borrowing against a future that grows more uncertain.

These are not random developments. They are signals.

They point to a civilization that has accumulated immense power, yet is struggling to wield it coherently.

This pattern is not confined to ancient Rome or distant empires. It is visible in the present moment.

The question is not whether power exists. It always has.

The question is whether humanity is ready to evolve in how it uses it.

- The Mirror Of Life -

What we see across civilizations is not merely history. It is law.

Power does not corrupt. Power reveals.

It reveals the level of consciousness of those who wield it. If that consciousness is coherent, power expresses as stewardship. If it is incoherent, power expresses as domination.

This is where the pattern becomes clear.

When power is exercised without restraint, it must be maintained through force. And the moment force becomes necessary to sustain power, decay has already begun.

Force can hold structures in place for a time. It can enforce compliance. It can project strength. But it cannot generate coherence. It cannot create trust. It can hold a living system captive for a time, but it cannot sustain a living system indefinitely.

Life does not organize through force. It organizes through relationship, harmony, interdependence and reciprocity. Systems that operate against these principles may appear strong, but they are fundamentally unstable.

This is why the late stages of civilizations often look similar.

Excess expands. Discipline erodes. Consumption accelerates. Meaning declines. The population becomes increasingly distracted and anesthetized, while power at the top becomes more concentrated and more insulated.

What appears as prosperity often masks fragility.

This is not a moral failure. It is a developmental one.

Humanity has learned how to accumulate power – and by extension technology – faster than it has learned how to govern it. The external capabilities have outpaced the internal maturity required to wield them.

And so the system compensates.

Force increases. Control tightens. Narratives are reinforced. Distraction intensifies. The imbalance grows until it can no longer be sustained.

At that point, correction is inevitable.

Not as punishment, but as restoration.

The fall of civilizations is not random. It is the natural consequence of sustained incoherence. When power is no longer aligned with the intelligence of Life, the system reorganizes.

This is the mirror before us.

Not to judge the past or condemn the present, but to recognize the pattern while there is still time to evolve beyond it.

- Truth In Action -

If civilizations falter when power is misused, the question becomes personal.

Where, in our own lives, do we wield power without awareness?

Power is not reserved for nations and institutions. It exists in every interaction. In how we speak. In how we influence. In how we make decisions. In how we use resources. In how we respond when we have the ability to shape outcomes.

Truth in Action begins with recognizing that power is always present.

Where do we impose rather than invite?

Where do we take rather than steward?

Where do we justify excess because we can?

Where do we rely on pressure, control, or avoidance instead of clarity and responsibility?

These are subtle expressions of the same pattern.

When power is not grounded in coherence, it leans toward force. It may not look like domination at a civilizational scale, but it appears in smaller ways. In relationships strained by control. In environments shaped by ego rather than alignment. In choices that prioritize short-term gain over long-term integrity.

The shift is not about renouncing power. It is about refining its use.

The right use of power requires restraint. It requires proportion. It requires an awareness of the whole, not just the part we occupy. It requires the willingness to act in ways that sustain the living system we part and parcel of rather than deplete.

This extends to how we live economically. How we consume. How we borrow. How we define success.

Whether our way of life is aligned with sustainability or built on extraction from a future we assume will somehow absorb the cost.

Power used coherently creates stability.

Power used incoherently creates subjugation.

The difference is not scale. It is orientation.

When individuals begin to align their use of power with responsibility and awareness, something shifts at a larger level. Systems begin to reflect that coherence.

The evolution of a civilization does not begin with its institutions. It begins with the individuals who no longer use power unconsciously.

- The Call Within -

Every civilization reaches a moment where it must confront how it uses power.

Not in theory. In practice.

The ruins of Rome are not merely remnants of history. They are reflections of a pattern humanity has not yet outgrown. The accumulation of power without the maturation to wield it responsibly. The slow drift from stewardship to domination. The quiet normalization of excess, until the system can no longer sustain itself.

The Call Within is to break that pattern.

Not by rejecting power, but by transforming our relationship to it.

Marcus Aurelius captured this simply:

“That which is not good for the beehive cannot be good for the bees.”

This is not merely philosophy. It is Cosmic law.

No individual, no institution, no nation can thrive for long while acting against the integrity of the whole. What appears as advantage in the short term becomes instability in the long term. What benefits the part at the expense of the whole eventually undermines both.

This is the threshold humanity now faces.

To continue wielding power through force, extraction, and excess is to repeat the cycle that has defined every major civilization before us. To evolve requires something different. It requires restraint. It requires responsibility. It requires the recognition that power is not a license to take, but a mandate to steward.

This begins within.

In the choices we make.

In how we consume.

In how we lead.

In how we influence.

In whether we act for immediate gain or long-term coherence.

We do not need to control the trajectory of civilizations to participate in their evolution. We only need to ensure that the power we hold, in whatever form it takes, is used in alignment with the whole.

The next chapter of humanity will not be defined by how much power we accumulate. It will be defined by whether we finally learn how to use it.

Once you see, you cannot unsee.

Love+Truth,

Robert +AI

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