About the Taiwan crisis! Spiritual

 About the Taiwan crisis! Spiritual

From a spiritual perspective, the situation regarding Taiwan is thought-provoking.

Currently, Russia has invaded Ukraine, and it appears as if other countries are merely bystanders, not actively helping in order to avoid triggering a potential Third World War.

Western countries may justify their inaction by noting that Ukraine is not a member of NATO. Similarly, when it comes to a Taiwan contingency, Western nations might refrain from intervening based on certain justifications.

Russia is the third-largest military power, while China is the second. Considering the potential for a Third World War, one could argue that a Taiwan contingency carries an even higher risk of escalation.

About the Taiwan crisis! Spiritual

Furthermore, compared to Russia, China has stronger connections with various countries, particularly with African nations.

While a Taiwan contingency is a matter close to Japan, from the perspective of distant countries, it may be seen simply as an internal issue within China.

However, for the United States, China’s expansion into the Pacific is a serious concern, as it could pose a threat to the western regions of America.

With Taiwan in place, it acts as a barrier that makes it more difficult for China to advance into the Pacific. For the United States and its citizens, the importance of this point cannot be underestimated.

Moreover, with the U.S. presidential election approaching, if public opinion leans toward avoiding American casualties, there is a possibility that the United States might choose not to intervene in a Taiwan contingency.

Regarding “Taiwan's crisis,” “feminine energy,” and “spirituality”

Regarding “Taiwan's crisis,” “feminine energy,” and “spirituality”

Regarding a Taiwan contingency, from the perspective of “female-dominant energy” and spirituality, this energy might trigger certain actions.

In spirituality, it is said that the overall energy of the Earth is gradually shifting from “male-dominant energy” to “female-dominant energy.”

This is not a sudden change like flipping a black-and-white switch, but rather a gradual transformation, similar to the relationship between the sun and the moon, influencing the entire Earth regardless of gender.

Female-dominant energy is still in its early stages. The mental energy of young women, with its opposing emotions such as joy, anger, sorrow, and pleasure, is more likely to manifest as societal polarization, contradictions, abrupt policy changes, and wave-like fluctuations.

Men tend to suppress and control their mental energy, making their mind and body rigid, whereas women tend to release and manage their energy outward, making their mind and body more flexible.

Changes occur more easily in flexibility than in rigidity, and this era marks the beginning of a “highly transformative period” driven by female-dominant energy.

In other words, the tendency to suppress energy weakens, while the tendency to release energy outward increases, making the possibility of a Taiwan contingency more likely.

Moreover, in a “highly transformative era,” changes that differ from the past are more prone to occur, meaning that even the previously stable relationship between China and Taiwan could undergo significant shifts.

Regarding “Taiwan's emergency situation,” Chinese communism, and “spirituality”

Regarding “Taiwan's emergency situation,” Chinese communism, and “spirituality”

Regarding a Taiwan contingency, there are insights that can be seen from the perspective of China’s communism and spirituality.

In this blog, I have often discussed “soul growth,” which is the idea that the growth of knowledge comes from each individual “realization,” and similarly, the growth of the heart, or “spiritual maturity,” comes from each individual realization within the heart.

When spiritual maturity increases, one’s existential presence strengthens in a mental sense, creative power to fulfill the hearts of others also increases, and the more realizations one has in the heart, the broader the perspective through which one views things. This is not a complicated topic—it is essentially about “maturing” in a spiritual sense.

Conversely, having low spiritual maturity means that existential presence is weak in a mental sense, and one tends to prioritize “fulfilling one’s own heart over fulfilling the hearts of others.” With fewer realizations in the heart, the perspective through which one views things also tends to be narrower. This, too, is not complicated—it is essentially about remaining a “child” in a spiritual sense.

In China, communism tends to create a situation in which many citizens share the same values.

Spiritual growth, or the growth of the heart, encourages change toward “maturing” in a mental sense through each realization from the heart.

Depending on the time and situation, values that differ from China’s communism may begin to emerge.

The Chinese Communist Party tends to suppress such differing values, which results in the emergence of people with low spiritual maturity—those who prioritize “fulfilling their own hearts over fulfilling the hearts of others.”

As a result, a mentality emerges in which people strongly seek to assert their own presence, and in this context, the likelihood of a Taiwan contingency increases.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Is the collective unconscious a lie? Spirituality

How can we eliminate slander and defamation? Spirituality

What does it mean to be without a partner?