Normalization of Suffering – Post 9: What Happens If the System Breaks?
We rarely think about it.
Because we’re not meant to.
The systems around us—power, internet, media, supply chains—feel permanent.
Reliable.
Always there.
But what happens… if they’re not?
What happens when the screens go dark?
When the ads stop?
When the constant stream of messaging disappears overnight?
Would we feel free?
Or lost?
It’s an uncomfortable question.
Because so much of our daily life now depends on systems we don’t fully see—or understand.
Our information.
Our connection.
Our routines.
Even our sense of reality.
And yet, there are places in the world where disruptions happen.
Where power isn’t guaranteed.
Where systems strain, fail, or shift.
Places like Cuba have experienced long periods of scarcity, outages, and adaptation.
And what’s interesting is not just the hardship.
It’s the response.
People adjust.
Communities reconnect.
Skills re-emerge.
Life slows down in ways that are difficult—but also revealing.
Because when systems fall away…
What remains becomes very clear.
Not ads.
Not algorithms.
Not constant noise.
People.
Connection.
Survival.
And maybe that’s why this question matters so much:
Have we become too dependent on systems that shape our thinking?
Because if those systems disappeared tomorrow…
Would we know how to think clearly without them?
Would we know how to connect without screens?
Would we know who we are—without constant input?
This isn’t about fear.
It’s about awareness.
Because the more dependent we become…
The more fragile that dependence can be.
And maybe, just maybe…
There’s something to learn from places that have already had to adapt.
Not because we want crisis.
But because we want resilience.
So here’s the question:
If the systems you rely on suddenly stopped—what would still remain?
And is that enough?
🔍 Reflection Questions
How dependent are you on electricity, internet, and digital systems in your daily life?
What would be the first thing you notice if all screens went dark?
Do you think constant access to information has strengthened or weakened your independence?
How do communities change when systems become unreliable?
What skills do you have that don’t rely on technology?
Do you believe modern society is resilient—or fragile?
What could we learn from places that experience regular system disruptions?
Would the absence of advertising feel like relief… or disorientation?
How much of your daily routine is shaped by systems you don’t control?
If everything external paused, what internal resources would you rely on?
