Going invisible will be widely recognized as a viable alternative way of life as more people say no to econoculture’s ravages and go on strike for better living conditions.
If you have come all this way with invisibility, then you have like the honeybee tapped the nectar of everyday commonplace ordinary humanity and awakened your powers of empathy. This alone is worth the journey.
Sinking deeper yet into the great wide sea of humanity, some among us discover a need to do more than just break free of econoculture’s noise and lies, liberating as that surely is. Some are called to descend deeper yet to depths of understandi
How to know where your true best interests lie, whether with the fruits of unjust social and economic systems, or with our radical revolution of values.
Invisibles opt for a cloistered way of life without the cloisters. They find in their portable refuge a welcome escape from nonstop commercial culture.
Liberation from the stereotype of nameless faceless masses is itself reward enough for our invisibility practice. Immersion in our common humanity is the cure for alienation.
Witnessing terrible things day after day that we can do nothing about is part of the madness of econoculture. Invisibles disengage from catastrophe overexposure and attend closely to what’s near at hand.
As money strips the legitimacy from econoculture democracy, one certain consequence is the spread of political non-participation. Some invisibles will even insist on exercising their right not to vote.
Getting our alienated econoculture selves re-grounded in our basic common humanity can require some painful introspection, but there are commensurate rewards.
Something we’ve been taught to fear and dread turns out to be an econoculture “straw world” meant to keep us cowed. No nameless faceless Mass actually exists.