REFLECTIVE INSIGHT #049 - HE WHAKAARO PAI KI NGĀ TĀNGATA KATOA: GOODWILL TOWARDS ALL PEOPLE
Our Shared Connection
Everything in this world is tied together. From the soil beneath our feet to the stars above, we are all part of one big, woven family. Because we are so closely linked, the way we carry ourselves matters more than we might think. When we walk into a room with a heavy heart or an angry spirit, others feel it. But when we choose to have "He Whakaaro Pai," or good will, we bring a sense of peace that can actually help heal the people around us. It is about realising that our kindness is a gift we give to the whole community.
Looking Out for Others
Many of our whānau in the North are going through some pretty rough times right now. Some are struggling to make ends meet, while others are dealing with loneliness or a dark cloud over their mental health. In times like these, we can’t just wait for a big government plan to fix things. We have to look out for each other right here, in our own streets and homes. By being a positive light, we help lift the heavy weight off someone else's shoulders. We give them a safe place to just be themselves, which is the first step toward getting their strength back.
REFLECTIVE INSIGHT #025 - PROPERLY FORKED - WHY OUR ECONOMY AND PLANET ARE CRASHING WITHOUT OUR CONSENT
Have you ever looked at the state of the world—the climate crisis, the social inequality, the fact that a lettuce recently outlasted a British Prime Minister—and thought, "Man, this is properly forked"?
Well, over my Christmas holiday (when I should have been eating ham and ignoring my emails), I went down a research rabbit hole so deep I nearly bumped into Alice. And I found out something terrifying: we actually are forked. But not in the way you think. It’s not just our politics or our economics that are broken. It’s our words.
We are trying to run a complex, living, breathing planet using a linguistic operating system designed for a steam engine.
REFLECTIVE INSIGHT #024 - THE GREAT SEMANTIC ENCLOSURE - WHY WE NEED A LINGUISTIC ‘HARD FORK’ FOR OUR FUTURE
Have you ever wondered why we struggle to solve 21st-century problems like climate change, social inequality, and ecological collapse using the tools of our current economic system? My recent research with The Quantum Whakapapa Project suggests the problem isn’t just in our policies, our technologies, or our politicians—it is in our words.
Over my Christmas holidays, I've been conducting a forensic investigation into the "source code" of our reality (Research Reports #228 and #229). My investigation explores the critical intersection of language and ontology. Put simply, ontology is the study of the nature of reality—it asks what things actually are and how they relate to one another. If your ontology is flawed (e.g., you believe the world is made of dead, separate objects), your economy will be destructive. If your ontology is accurate (e.g., you understand the world is a web of living, entangled connections), your economy can be regenerative.