Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Why are so many with full loaves so begrudging of those who have a slice? 26.03.2.1

Posted in Philosophy

Choice, Chance, Change

It’s easy to fall into a routine—a pattern, a path, a simple rut. After a while, it can feel like being a snake in a wagon-track after rain: pressed into the groove, unable to see a clean way out. Stuck. Destined to follow the track wherever it leads.

But remember, you helped get yourself into it, and you can help get yourself out. The way out begins with choice, then a chance, then change. Even when a situation feels unsolvable or risky, you can still act—if only to begin the process. Yes, many parts of life are socially or professionally controlled. Even inside those boundaries, there are choices—subtle ones, small ones, but choices, nonetheless. The point is to exercise them.

Every choice has consequences. That is not a reason to freeze; it is a reason to brace. The choices and chances do not have to be big, bodacious gestures. Small, incremental shifts can be deeply significant. Change often starts there: deciding you want it, choosing toward it, and accepting the chance that comes with each step.

You don’t have to wait for a grand opening, a sign, or even the perfect plan. You need to make a choice and follow through — today. Even a small pivot can change your life’s course. Many of us like the phrase  ‘turning over a new leaf’ because it is clean and peaceful. In practice, it is usually more complicated than the phrase suggests—longer-term, sometimes riskier. Still, the principle holds: be willing to turn the leaf and look for something new. Yes, there may be thorns. That comes with reaching. Sometimes the only way to discover is to try.

And if you think you’ve already turned every leaf in your effort to change, wait for spring. There will be a whole forest again—even the trees in your own yard will leaf out—offering a fresh crop of leaves to turn; nature is annoyingly generous that way. Take a deep breath and just start turning.  NeverFearTheDream     simplebender.com

– ..- .-. -. / – …. . / -.. .- — -. / .-.. . .- ..-.


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

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Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Love and compassion shouldn’t be transactional events. You either love and care, or you don’t, and you’re in a negotiation. 26.03.01

Posted in Philosophy

Peace Isn’t a Transaction

True peace involves transparency and lasting stability, not just temporary agreements that leave underlying issues unresolved.

Peace usually arrives in one of two ways: the combatants decide they’ve had enough, or one side is crushed. When the cost of continuing exceeds the cost of stopping, both parties yield—grudgingly—and accept a compromise. It’s rarely elegant. More often, it’s a deal both sides dislike, but it’s better than attending the next round of funerals.

Mediators can help when they are genuinely independent: attentive to each side’s fears, aims, and non-negotiables, and skilled at translating rage into terms that can be signed. A good mediator doesn’t erase the chasm; they build a narrow, temporary bridge and keep traffic moving long enough for a fragile truce to harden into something closer to peace.

But when the mediator wants something out of the game, the process shifts. Influence becomes leverage. The negotiation stops being about stabilizing a region and starts being about capturing value. Quiet “side letters” and backchannel commitments on resources, arms, protection, exclusive access to markets, manufacturing, or intellectual property tilt the table before the first public handshake. The parties are no longer bargaining over borders or security alone; they’re trading away remaining national assets and future autonomy to a broker whose primary loyalty is to their own gain.

That doesn’t produce peace. It produces a transactional truce: temporary, brittle, and designed to be violated and renegotiated. One side will test it, and the other will retaliate. Both will rearm. Both will reposition, and each will be desperately trying to win the mediator’s favor for the inevitable next round.

And the cold-eyed, self-impressed mediator will call it “progress,” label it “strategy,” and shop for new pressure points. This is not mediation; it is profiteering, prolonging pain for profit. An oversized, bombastic arms dealer in a tailored suit, prolonging the pain until the spoils are secured. Always boasting of skills that don’t exist, promising ridiculous timeframes, and fleecing the dying for the privilege of false hope.

The irony is hard to miss: if the combatants ever compared notes, exposed the hidden terms, and refused to be monetized, they might discover a common enemy—not across the front line but behind the curtain: the amoral mediator profiting from perpetual instability. NeverFearTheDream    simplebender.com

..— ….. – …. / ….- –… – ….


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

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Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Self-deception is self-deprivation—denying yourself the truth denies you growth. 26.02.08


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

From the moment we are born, we begin our journey on the path of mortality—embrace every step, every moment—for no one knows the length of their life’s road. 26.02.07


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

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Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

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Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

Choose to lead by uplifting, with a calm hand, not by fear, intimidation, or revenge. Leaders choosing the first probably care about all; the latter care only about themselves. 26.02.06


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read
Posted in Philosophy

Two Ends, One Arc, One Humanity

Two unique ends joined together in beauty...

We stand in awe at the wonder of a rainbow, where two ends seemingly anchored move with your motion. Two ends unite in a seamless band of color that reflects our shared human experience. The same unifying bands remind us that despite our differences, we are connected through the same light, the same colors, the same humanity.

Christian Lent begins in one sanctuary with penance: remember your mortality and The Sacrifice. Islamic Ramadan begins in another realm with a whispered intention: remember your dependence. Different rituals: yet, both trace back to the same broad spiritual lineage—Abraham. Fasting, repentance, charity, and self-denial are shared practices rooted in this common heritage. They are carried forward in both Islam and Christianity, illustrating our interconnected spiritual traditions.

Between those ends stretches the rainbow’s spectrum — red to violet, each band distinct, each shade necessary. The beauty is not in uniformity but in ordered diversity. Every band retains its identity while belonging to and building something larger.

Bias is what happens when we insist that only our perspective is right. When we claim ownership of the light and forget that our perceptions are shaped by perspective, we neglect the reality that shared understanding and compassion define humanity.

Fasting under a church steeple or a mosque minaret confronts the same human experience and encourages acceptance and understanding. The rainbow does not advocate for which end is the original or correct. It simply refracts what already exists, the light that we all are.

Unity is not sameness. It is recognition and acceptance. For the rainbow to exist, there must be interaction between sky and earth, sun and rain, and yet we can stand on different ground and share the same light, fostering openness and clarity.

When bias dissolves, what remains is not a blurred identity but a clearer vision of our interconnectedness. We realize that the bonds we share are not forced but natural, like the spectrum of a rainbow that was always one phenomenon, reflecting the unity inherent in our diversity.

Two unique ends. Shared colors. Common light. Humanity does not need to merge to be united. It only needs the clarity to see the arc. NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

. –. . .- -.-. . / … …. .- .-.. — — / … .- .-.. .- .- —

On Wednesday, February 18, 2026, Christians enter Lent and Muslims begin their first full fast of Ramadan. Ramadan and Lent align closely in 2026 and overlap meaningfully in 2027, a convergence that recurs roughly every 33 years, next appearing around 2059–2061. Ramadan follows a purely lunar calendar, while Lent follows a solar-lunar calculation tied to Easter; their seasons of sacrifice and faith overlap only when the drifting Islamic year aligns with the Christian liturgical cycle—an intersection that occurs roughly once every 33 years and can last several consecutive years before separating again.


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Posted in NeverFeartheDream

Never Fear The Dream…

The most enduring Awakening is gradual, not sudden. Sensing all of yourself as you gather awareness—not jolted from sleep, confused and groggy. 26.02.05


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read
Posted in Political

The Optics of Weakness

When I worked in Syria, Assad’s pictures and banners were everywhere. There was a saying you heard quietly uttered and trusted immediately: You can tell the weakness of a leader by the number of his portraits hanging in public. It wasn’t cynical. It was observational. People who had lived under strongmen understood; power that must constantly announce itself is power that doubts its own legitimacy.

We once believed America was exempt from this rule. Our institutions were supposed to be independent, strong, equally balanced, and impersonal enough to keep authority both distributed and temporary. That confidence now seems naïve.

Modern American politics is increasingly visual, performative, and personality-driven. Faces dominate screens—names eclipse policies. Rallies resemble revival meetings. Loyalty is measured by personal allegiance rather than by commitment to constitutional principles. Flags, slogans, branded backdrops, portraits draped across government buildings, names adorning every possible grift, and omnipresent imagery—assertions of dominance in a restless, anxious public square.

When institutions lose trust, leaders step forward as symbols, as demigods. When governance grows complex and outcomes disappoint, image fills the void left by results. Legitimacy shifts from systems to the worship of individuals, from rules to personalities. The leader does not serve the institution; the institution is recast to serve the leader.

The more fragile trust becomes—in elections, courts, media, and science—the more faux leaders insist on being ever-present. Every success must bear their name and likeness. Every failure must be blamed on an enemy. Every criticism becomes sabotage and treason. In this environment, real leaders cannot afford to fade into the background of dysfunctional systems, which are themselves under strain.

This transformation is dangerous, not dramatic. Once power is personalized, disagreement becomes disloyalty. Oversight becomes persecution. Independent judges, journalists, and civil servants are no longer neutral actors but obstacles to image maintenance. Reality itself becomes negotiable because the image cannot tolerate correction. Facts that undermine the portrait must be attacked, dismissed, twisted, or replaced.

This is how republics erode without collapsing—slowly, legally, and often enthusiastically. Genuine leadership does not require constant reaffirmation. It does not need its face everywhere or its name in every chant. It governs through institutions robust enough to outlast any individual. It allows space for criticism because it is anchored in systems, not in the self. Weak leadership crowds out that space. It fills every silence. It demands recognition not because it has earned it, but because it fears what happens without it.

The sage wisdom still holds. You just have to know where to look. The walls are no longer plaster or stone. They are timelines, feeds, stages, and screens. Yet they tell the same story they always have—about insecurity masquerading as strength and the stark divide between leaders who trust and support institutions and those who need to be seen leading. The irony is that every image becomes an incendiary insult, inflaming resistance more than rallying support.

Once you recognize the pattern, the noise becomes legible. And once it is legible, it becomes impossible to ignore. Indeed, You can tell the weakness of a leader by the number of his portraits hanging in public; and history has a way of knowing which effigies to hang-up.    NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

Joy in Alzheimer’s
W.C. Barron
Lap Around the Sun
Daily Steps Forward — W.C. Barron