Survival can mean many things, depending on your point of view.
In Quantum Paradigm context, its far deeper than one’s transient mortal frame.
Even were I to live one-hundred years, that would be a mere blip on the quantum radar screen, which encompasses past, present and future lives all the way into eternity.
In quantum context, survival depends upon linking surface to center of the Quantum Life Wheel, consciously connecting with the single eternal creative source from which all life emanates and to which it ultimately returns.
At an earlier time, I worked with the survival word in the context of the e=energy middle level of the Life Wheel. Going one step inwards from the exclusively materialistic plane — becoming aware of the energy dynamics embodied in Natural Law which drive external results — seemed like an important step forward towards increasing self-awareness.
An excerpt from an earlier book explains:
“In the 2000 millennial year, the title I assigned to the 64 Essays was The Ultimate Personal Survival Guide. It came from a brainstorming session with a business consultant. We were discussing how to market The Common Sense Book of Change.
“She was unfamiliar with the I Ching, so we went back and forth with questions and answers about its use and value. Finally, she sat back and blinked. ‘It sounds like the
ultimate personal survival guide,’ she concluded.
“She’d hit the nail right on the head. She got it!”
Later, in the book called Rethinking Survival, I expanded the use of the survival word. From the Introduction:
“Survival is a primal word. It means to LIVE, the alternative being extinction. Survival is the bottom line. In a life or death situation, the natural instinct is to survive at the cost of everything else. The basics must be secured first. If you’re dead, thriving isn’t
an option.
“However, as the title suggests, the focus of Rethinking Survival isn’t on “how to” survive. Here, survival implies that there’s more than martial arts skills, back woods know-how and environmental smarts to staying alive. It requires self-knowledge and a connection to one’s deepest roots of origin, as well as a powerful, clearly defined and positive purpose for living.
“It also requires an educated sense of timing: an acute awareness of alternating cycles — natural pendulum swings between extremes of expansion and contraction — along with the will and patience to ride them out.”
Why am I revisiting the evolution of my use of the survival word now?
Because of recent exposure of a perversion of the subject: a small elite grasping for physical longevity at the expense of the rest of us. In a Tucker Carlson interview, we’re told that millions of tax payer money has gone missing, dedicated to building underground bunker-like bases intended to avoid and outlast extinction-level events. Catherine Fitts: Bankers vs. the West, Secret Underground Bases, and the Oncoming Extinction Event.
How can I count the myriad ways this myopic (ultimately foolish and futile) project misses the mark?
Not enough time.
But I do wonder — now that this covert misdirection of our monies has been exposed to the public, what will become of these properties? Will they revert to government use? To the people? Or . . . ?
More importantly, how could we better use our resources, dedicate them towards optimizing genuine survival of the greatest number?



