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Paul’s words carry the vibration of the Judgment card — the trumpet that calls the collective soul to rise from old conditioning.
His repeated plea, “Wake up,” isn’t anger; it’s awakening energy. He isn’t attacking systems or parties; he’s inviting clarity — the kind of clarity that comes when illusion falls away and truth begins to hum beneath the noise.
When he says “they don’t care about us,” he’s voicing a collective grief. Humanity has long poured trust into figures of power, hoping that leadership equals compassion. Paul reminds us that those who rise to represent a structure often serve the system more than the spirit. That isn’t cynicism; it’s realism with a spiritual edge — the wisdom of the Hermit, who carries his lantern not to expose others but to illuminate truth within the shadows.
By Paul HeschPaul’s words carry the vibration of the Judgment card — the trumpet that calls the collective soul to rise from old conditioning.
His repeated plea, “Wake up,” isn’t anger; it’s awakening energy. He isn’t attacking systems or parties; he’s inviting clarity — the kind of clarity that comes when illusion falls away and truth begins to hum beneath the noise.
When he says “they don’t care about us,” he’s voicing a collective grief. Humanity has long poured trust into figures of power, hoping that leadership equals compassion. Paul reminds us that those who rise to represent a structure often serve the system more than the spirit. That isn’t cynicism; it’s realism with a spiritual edge — the wisdom of the Hermit, who carries his lantern not to expose others but to illuminate truth within the shadows.