- 7/4/2025
In psychology, it’s recognized that highly intelligent individuals can sometimes pose a unique threat to society—not because of their intellect alone, but because of how it combines with traits like narcissism, overconfidence, or moral disengagement. When smart people use their cognitive abilities to rationalize harmful actions, manipulate systems, or pursue power without ethical restraint, they can create far-reaching negative consequences. Their capability to influence, persuade, and innovate can, paradoxically, be turned against the collective good—making them, at times, more dangerous than those with average intelligence who might lack the same strategic insight.
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00:00Have you ever felt like telling the truth makes people uncomfortable?
00:03Not because you were rude, not because you were trying to offend anyone, but because
00:07your words cut too close to something they were trying not to see.
00:12Maybe you have noticed it before.
00:14That subtle shift in the room when you speak clearly, the silence that follows, the blank
00:18stares, the half-smile that tries to dismiss what you just said, or worse, the way people
00:25suddenly change the subject, as if your words carried something too sharp, too heavy, too
00:31real to handle.
00:32You were not being aggressive.
00:34You were not even trying to make a point.
00:36You were just honest.
00:38But your honesty was not received with gratitude.
00:41It was met with tension, with discomfort, with resistance.
00:46If you have ever felt this, you are not imagining it.
00:49You are touching something most people spend their entire lives avoiding.
00:53Because in a world built on comforting illusions, truth is a threat.
00:58And the people who see the truth, who think too deeply, speak too clearly, and ask questions
01:03that don't have easy answers, they don't just get ignored.
01:07They get feared.
01:08They get pushed out.
01:10They get silenced.
01:11It does not matter if your intention was good.
01:14It does not matter if what you said was accurate.
01:16What matters is that your presence made others feel exposed.
01:21And most people would rather protect the lie than face the light.
01:24Schopenhauer understood this better than most.
01:27Long before cancel culture, censorship, or social media, he wrote that intelligence is
01:32not a gift, it's a curse.
01:34Not because it makes you fail, but because it makes you see too much, too clearly, too soon.
01:40And when you see what others refuse to see, when you hold up a mirror in a world that only
01:45wants filters, you don't just stand out, you become dangerous.
01:49It's strange, is not it?
01:51When someone is physically stronger than you, you don't feel insulted.
01:55You admire them.
01:56When someone is wealthier, you might feel envy, but not rejection.
02:00But when someone is more intelligent, especially when they speak truth with clarity, something
02:05changes.
02:06Suddenly, it feels personal.
02:09Because truth is not neutral, it reflects.
02:13And when it reflects, it does not just reveal the world, it reveals you.
02:18Psychologists call this the mirror effect.
02:20It's when someone's presence, not their criticism, not their judgment, just their presence makes
02:25others feel inadequate.
02:27Not because the thinker said something offensive, but because they unintentionally highlight what
02:31others are suppressing.
02:33Sleep thinkers don't just introduce new ideas, they disturb unspoken beliefs.
02:38They challenge illusions that people have built their entire identity around.
02:42They unintentionally become a threat to comfort, to ego, to certainty.
02:47That's the tragedy.
02:48You don't have to try to threaten anyone, you just have to exist.
02:52Your presence alone is enough to make others feel exposed.
02:55Because when someone sees clearly, it reminds everyone else that they have been choosing to
02:59look away.
03:01This is why intelligence is met with quiet rejection, not applause.
03:05Because it does not flatter the audience, it confronts them.
03:08Think about your own life.
03:10Have you ever been in a group where you asked a deep question, and the air just went still?
03:15Where you pointed out an uncomfortable truth, and the energy shifted, not in your favor?
03:20That moment where you said something real, and people responded with forced silence, deflection,
03:25or passive dismissal?
03:27It was not about what you said.
03:29It was about what your words forced them to feel.
03:31Because truth, by its nature, divides.
03:34It divides illusion from reality, comfort from clarity, self-protection from self-awareness.
03:41And most people, when faced with that choice, don't choose growth, they choose safety.
03:46And that's where the mirror becomes a weapon.
03:47Not because the thinker intended it, but because others see their own reflection in it, and they
03:52hate what they see.
03:54Schopenhauer understood this deeply.
03:56He believed that society does not fear intelligence in theory.
04:00It fears the way intelligence makes them feel.
04:03Because it strips away the protective lies they have wrapped around their identity.
04:07In a world addicted to image, simplicity, and reassurance, the deep thinker is a walking
04:12contradiction.
04:13They are not trying to offend.
04:16But their clarity becomes a form of confrontation.
04:19Their presence becomes a kind of psychological exposure.
04:22This is why truth gets rejected.
04:24This is why thinkers get excluded.
04:26And this is why, more often than not, the clearer your vision becomes, the lonelier your
04:31path gets.
04:33To understand why truth is feared, we have to go back.
04:36Not just a few decades, but thousands of years.
04:40Back to when human survival did not depend on intellect.
04:43It depended on belonging.
04:45In early human tribes, being accepted by the group was not just a social perk.
04:49It was the difference between life and death.
04:52To be cast out meant isolation.
04:54And isolation meant exposure, vulnerability, extinction.
04:59That's why our brains evolved not to seek truth, but to seek safety.
05:03And safety came through harmony, not disruption.
05:06Through agreement, not conflict.
05:08Through fitting in, not standing out.
05:10The human mind was never wired for independent thought.
05:14It was wired for tribal survival.
05:16And that wiring still controls us.
05:19Even in modern society, where we live in cities, not jungles, our brains are still running
05:24ancient software.
05:26That software tells us one thing, over and over again.
05:30Don't be different.
05:31Don't make people uncomfortable.
05:33Don't threaten the group.
05:34Because when you speak the truth, especially a truth that challenges the group's beliefs,
05:39you are not just offering a new idea.
05:42You are breaking the unwritten contract of tribal harmony.
05:45And the brain treats that like a threat.
05:47Neuroscience backs this up.
05:49When someone hears a perspective that challenges their worldview, the amygdala, the brain's
05:54fear center, lights up.
05:56The same region that responds to physical danger becomes active.
06:00But this time, the threat is not a predator.
06:02It's you.
06:03Your ideas.
06:04Your presence.
06:05Your presence.
06:06It's not logical.
06:07It's biological.
06:08And it explains why society does not just resist new ideas.
06:13It often attacks the people who introduce them.
06:16Because truth does not just threaten belief systems.
06:19It threatens social stability.
06:21It threatens hierarchies.
06:23It threatens egos.
06:25When someone questions the norm, they shake the foundation the group is standing on.
06:29And most people don't want to check if the ground beneath them is cracked.
06:32They just want you to stop shaking it.
06:34This is why charisma is celebrated, but truth is punished.
06:38Why confidence is admired, but critical thinking is feared.
06:42Because one maintains the group's comfort, and the other threatens to burn it down.
06:47But here's the paradox.
06:49Society does not fear truth itself.
06:51It fears what truth does to people.
06:53It fears the discomfort, the rebellion, the loss of control, the disruption of the known.
06:59So it silences the truth teller, not because they are wrong, but because their clarity is
07:04too dangerous for the current illusion to survive.
07:08And that's the invisible war every deep thinker walks into.
07:11Not against ignorance, but against a world that will do anything to preserve its own comfort.
07:16Arthur Schopenhauer did not romanticize intelligence.
07:19He did not call it a blessing.
07:21He called it a burden.
07:23In a world that celebrates knowledge as power and education as a virtue, Schopenhauer stood
07:27alone in saying something most people still avoid.
07:31The more clearly you see reality, the harder it is to live in it.
07:35At the heart of his philosophy is a brutal split between two forces.
07:39The will to live and the will to truth.
07:42The will to live is what drives most people.
07:45It's the instinctual desire for survival, comfort, pleasure, and distraction.
07:50It's the part of the psyche that says, don't think too much, just be happy, fit in, stay
07:56safe.
07:57This is what fuels consumer culture, shallow conversation, status games, and blind ambition.
08:04Most people live under this at will their entire lives, chasing pleasure, avoiding pain, and
08:09doing everything to not think too deeply.
08:12But the will to truth, that's different.
08:15That's rare.
08:16It's not about survival.
08:17It's about clarity.
08:18About understanding the world, even if it breaks you.
08:21Schopenhauer believed that the deeply intelligent are cursed with this second will.
08:25They can't close their eyes.
08:27They can't pretend.
08:28They can't sit comfortably in shallow pleasures when they know the emptiness beneath them.
08:33This is why deep thinkers often feel alienated in crowded rooms.
08:37Why they feel restless in jobs that revolve around routine.
08:41Why they experience existential loneliness even when surrounded by others.
08:45Because their mind is tuned to a different frequency.
08:48One that constantly asks, what's the point?
08:52What's the truth beneath this mask?
08:54Schopenhauer wrote, a high degree of intellect tends to make a man unsocial.
08:59Not because the intelligent dislike people, but because the deeper your mind reaches, the
09:04harder it is to find someone who understands you.
09:07This is not arrogance.
09:09It's ache.
09:10Imagine walking through a world where everyone is content chasing shadows.
09:15While you see the strings, the lies, the desperate distractions beneath it all.
09:19How do you talk about that at a dinner party?
09:21How do you share that in a group chat?
09:24You don't.
09:25You stay quiet.
09:26You nod.
09:27You go along with it, even though something inside you is always detached.
09:31Half present, half staring into the void.
09:34That's the curse of awareness.
09:36The smarter you are, the less you can lie to yourself.
09:39And the less you can lie to yourself, the harder it becomes to stay connected to a world
09:43built on denial.
09:45This is why so many brilliant minds throughout history descended into solitude.
09:50Not because they were antisocial, but because truth creates distance.
09:55Spiritual solitude is not about being alone.
09:57It's about being unable to share the depth of your thoughts without diluting them.
10:01It's about seeing life for what it is, and realizing how few people are truly ready to
10:06go there with you.
10:07And yet, deep thinkers keep going.
10:10Not because they enjoy the pain.
10:12But because the alternative, living in comfortable ignorance, is unbearable.
10:17This is the will to truth.
10:18It's the path of those who would rather be lonely and awake than accepted and asleep.
10:23It does not win popularity contests.
10:26It does not trend on social media.
10:28But it creates something far more valuable than attention.
10:32Freedom.
10:33The freedom to see clearly.
10:35To break illusions.
10:37To live with eyes wide open, even if it means walking alone.
10:40In ancient times, truth-tellers were imprisoned, exiled, or executed.
10:46Today the methods have changed.
10:48But the outcome has not.
10:50Now, we silence deep thinkers not with swords, but with systems.
10:54Not through force, but through filters, algorithms, classroom rubrics, office cultures, and public
11:02opinion.
11:03If you are a deep thinker in today's world, you are not likely to be burned at the stake.
11:07But you will be ignored, misunderstood, shadow banned, and quietly pushed aside.
11:13Why?
11:14Because modern systems don't reward depth, they reward compliance.
11:18Take a look at your feed.
11:20What content gets shared the most?
11:22Not nuanced arguments, not intellectual insight, but outrage, simplicity.
11:30Emotional punchlines that demand nothing from the brain and everything from the gut.
11:34The algorithm does not want you to think.
11:36It wants you to react.
11:38It prioritizes what's addictive, not what's awakening.
11:41And deep thinkers?
11:42They move slow, they ask hard questions, they don't fit the clickbait formula.
11:48So, their work, their thoughts, their truth, gets buried.
11:53Not because it is not valuable, but because it's not instantly profitable.
11:57Schools love to pretend they value intelligence.
12:00But what they really value is obedience disguised as achievement.
12:04Students are rewarded for memorizing what they are told, not for asking why they are being
12:08told it in the first place.
12:11Curriculums are built on conformity, not critical thinking.
12:14Standardized tests punish divergent thought.
12:17And those who challenge authority?
12:19They are labeled as troublemakers, not pioneers.
12:22In this system, intelligence becomes a liability.
12:26Curiosity is seen as a distraction.
12:28And truth, especially uncomfortable truth, is treated as a disruption to classroom order.
12:34Then you grow up and enter the corporate world.
12:37And what do you find?
12:39That being smart does not matter if you don't fit in.
12:41That insight is threatening when it challenges your manager.
12:44That true innovation is welcomed until it threatens existing power structures.
12:49The smartest person in the room often stays quiet.
12:53Not because they don't see the flaws, but because they know what happens to those who
12:57point them out.
12:58Workplaces are not built to elevate deep thinkers.
13:01They are built to protect the system.
13:03And anyone who questions that system, even with brilliant ideas, becomes a risk.
13:08And that's the irony.
13:09You're not being rejected for being wrong.
13:12You're being rejected for being too right, too soon.
13:15For speaking truths the world is not ready to hear.
13:18For thinking thoughts that others aren't prepared to confront.
13:22It's not your logic that's the problem.
13:24It's the timing.
13:25The clarity.
13:26The way your presence disrupts the fragile scaffolding that holds modern illusions together.
13:31In a society addicted to comfort, truth feels violent.
13:35Insight feels intrusive.
13:37Awareness feels like rebellion.
13:39So we exile the thinkers digitally, socially, systemically.
13:45Not because they're dangerous in the traditional sense, but because they shine a light in places
13:49others would rather keep dark.
13:51When you speak the truth and someone pushes back, not with reason but with resistance,
13:56it's easy to think they're just being difficult.
13:59But what you're really seeing is the human mind defending itself.
14:04Because the truth, especially when delivered by someone with clarity and intelligence, doesn't
14:09just challenge beliefs.
14:11It threatens the very structure that people build their identity on.
14:15This is why deep thinkers often find themselves shut down.
14:18Not because what they're saying is wrong, but because it activates deep psychological defense
14:23systems most people aren't even aware of.
14:26Let's break down the core ones.
14:28The Dunning-Kruger effect.
14:30People with low ability often overestimate their intelligence.
14:33Meanwhile, those who are genuinely intelligent tend to doubt themselves more.
14:38This creates a strange paradox.
14:40The less someone knows, the more confident they are in what they think they know.
14:45So, when a deep thinker introduces complexity, nuance, or uncomfortable truths, those with surface
14:51level understanding don't pause to consider.
14:55They dismiss.
14:56They deflect.
14:57They try to reassert dominance.
14:59Not with truth, but with volume.
15:01It's not intellectual conflict.
15:03It's ego protection.
15:05The backfire effect.
15:07Most people believe that if you present facts, minds will change.
15:11But psychology tells a darker truth.
15:14When people are confronted with information that contradicts their beliefs, they don't just
15:17reject it.
15:18They double down.
15:20This is called the backfire effect.
15:22It's the brain saying, if this truth is real, then I've been wrong.
15:26And if I've been wrong, then my identity is unstable.
15:29I'd rather protect my self-image than accept a new idea.
15:32So instead of curiosity, you get hostility.
15:36Instead of dialogue, you get defensiveness.
15:38And once again, the thinker is pushed out.
15:41Not because they failed, but because they revealed too much.
15:44Status quo.
15:45Bias.
15:46The human mind craves familiarity, even when it's broken.
15:49We cling to routines, beliefs, traditions.
15:53Not because they're optimal, but because they're comfortable.
15:55This is the status quo bias.
15:57A mental shortcut that favors what already exists.
16:01So when a deep thinker suggests a radical truth, whether it's about society, politics,
16:06relationships, or the self.
16:09The average person's instinct isn't to examine it.
16:12It's to defend the familiar.
16:13They'd rather stay in a crumbling house than admit they need to rebuild from scratch.
16:18Groupthink humans are tribal by nature.
16:20We crave belonging.
16:22And nothing threatens belonging more than being the one who thinks differently.
16:26Groupthink is the tendency to align with majority opinion, even when it goes against logic,
16:30truth, or morality.
16:32Just to avoid rejection.
16:33So, when a deep thinker questions the group's norms, they're often seen not as someone
16:38seeking truth, but as someone disrupting harmony.
16:41They become the outsider, the problem, the enemy of peace, even when they're speaking
16:46from wisdom.
16:47You can say the most rational thing in the room, backed by data, wisdom, or lived experience,
16:53and still be ignored, ridiculed, or attacked.
16:56It's not always because people can't understand.
16:59It's because they don't want to.
17:00Because accepting your truth means they have to let go of theirs.
17:04And most people are more loyal to their illusions than they are to truth.
17:07It's not a conscious conspiracy.
17:09It's deeper than that.
17:10It's biology, it's ego, it's fear.
17:14And that's the unseen battlefield deep thinkers step into every time they open their mouth.
17:19Not a war of ideas, but a war against defense mechanisms designed to keep people asleep.
17:24This pattern is not new.
17:26History is full of brilliant minds who spoke the truth, not to provoke, but to illuminate.
17:32And every single time, the world wasn't ready.
17:35Socrates, he's now known as the father of Western philosophy.
17:40But in his lifetime, Socrates was seen as a dangerous agitator.
17:44He asked questions no one wanted to answer.
17:46He challenged tradition, exposed contradictions, and pushed people to think for themselves.
17:52And for that, he was sentenced to death.
17:55His real crime, encouraging people to think critically.
17:58He was given a choice, exile or execution.
18:02He chose to drink poison.
18:04And his final words still echo, the unexamined life is not worth living.
18:10Galileo Galileo Galileo did not just look at the stars.
18:13He redefined our place among them.
18:15He proved the earth revolves around the sun, shattering centuries of religious belief.
18:20The church branded him a heretic.
18:22He was forced to deny his own discoveries, silenced, confined to house arrest for the rest
18:28of his life.
18:29Today, we teach his work in schools.
18:32But in his time, he was seen as a threat to power.
18:34Nietzsche exposed the lies behind traditional morality.
18:38He said things no one wanted to hear.
18:40That society is built on comforting illusions.
18:43And that true strength comes from facing meaninglessness and creating your own values.
18:48He died alone, misunderstood, dismissed as mad.
18:52Now?
18:53His ideas shape modern psychology, existentialism, and philosophy itself.
18:58The world feared his voice, but adopted his vision long after he was gone.
19:03Nikola Tesla.
19:05Tesla imagined a world powered by wireless energy.
19:08Free electricity for all.
19:10But free energy didn't sit well with those profiting off power.
19:13He was undermined, discredited, and shut down.
19:17Not because his ideas didn't work, but because they threatened the profit structure of the elite.
19:22He died alone, penniless.
19:24Meanwhile, the world runs on his inventions.
19:27Alan Turing.
19:29Turing cracked the Enigma code and helped end World War II.
19:32He laid the foundation for modern computing and artificial intelligence.
19:37But because of his sexuality, he was persecuted by the very country he helped save.
19:42Chemically castrated, humiliated, driven to suicide.
19:46Decades later, he was pardoned and honored as a hero.
19:49But not when it mattered.
19:51Not when he was alive.
19:53Hypatia.
19:54A philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer in ancient Alexandria.
19:59Hypatia was one of the few female intellectuals of her time.
20:02She taught logic and scientific reasoning.
20:05But in a world dominated by religious extremism, she was seen as a symbol of resistance.
20:10She was dragged from her chariot by a mob, stripped and murdered.
20:14Her crime, knowledge.
20:16She was a threat not because she was wrong, but because she thought too freely.
20:20And so, the pattern repeats.
20:22Truth-tellers are punished in the present and praised in the future.
20:27Society does not fear truth in hindsight.
20:29It fears it in real time.
20:31Because truth destabilizes.
20:33It reveals what institutions try to hide.
20:36It demands change before people are ready.
20:38So we mock the visionary.
20:40Until we realize they were right.
20:42Then we build statues.
20:44But the damage is already done.
20:46Speaking the truth sounds noble.
20:48But in reality, it's one of the fastest ways to become a target.
20:52Even today, in an age where we claim to value free speech, whistleblowers are punished,
20:57critics are ridiculed, and thinkers are sidelined for saying what everyone else is too afraid
21:02to admit.
21:03You don't have to be famous.
21:05You don't need a platform.
21:06All it takes is one honest sentence in the wrong room.
21:10And suddenly, you're the problem.
21:13Because truth doesn't just challenge ideas.
21:15It disrupts relationships.
21:17It threatens unspoken agreements.
21:19It exposes what others would rather leave buried.
21:22And that kind of clarity?
21:24It doesn't earn applause.
21:25It earns silence, avoidance, whispers behind your back, subtle exclusion.
21:31The cost of truth isn't always intellectual.
21:33It's social.
21:34It's emotional.
21:35It's physical.
21:37People stop inviting you.
21:38They label you too intense, too negative, too complicated.
21:43What they really mean is, you see too much.
21:46You speak too clearly.
21:47And it makes us uncomfortable.
21:49And it's not because you're wrong.
21:50It's because you're right too soon.
21:52You've likely felt this.
21:54The loneliness after a conversation where you told the truth.
21:57Not to be rude.
21:59Not to win.
22:00But because you couldn't lie to yourself or others anymore.
22:03And instead of connection, you felt the wall go up.
22:06That subtle distancing.
22:07The way people pull away.
22:09Not because they don't like you.
22:10But because you reflected something they didn't want to face.
22:14This is what Schopenhauer warned us about.
22:16He believed that truth doesn't just enlighten.
22:18It isolates.
22:20The more clearly you see, the more separate you become from those who live comfortably
22:24in illusion.
22:25He wrote that intelligence and happiness are often inversely related.
22:29Because the clearer your mind, the harder it becomes to participate in shallow pleasures,
22:34casual deception, or meaningless routine.
22:37And the world punishes you for that.
22:39Not with violence, but with distance.
22:42With dismissal.
22:43With exile disguised as normal social dynamics.
22:47That's the hidden cost of speaking clearly.
22:50It's not that people will argue with you.
22:52It's that they will slowly disappear.
22:54So if the world fears deep thinkers.
22:56If truth isolates.
22:58If clarity creates distance.
23:00Then what should the deep thinker do?
23:03Should they go silent?
23:04Play dumb?
23:05Shrink their thoughts to fit the room?
23:08Schopenhauer would say, absolutely not.
23:11He never encouraged conformity.
23:13But he did encourage wisdom.
23:15Not just intellectual wisdom.
23:17But emotional intelligence about how to live in a world that doesn't value depth.
23:22And his advice was clear.
23:24Don't abandon truth.
23:26But learn when, where, and how to share it.
23:29Not every room deserves your deepest thoughts.
23:32Not every conversation is a safe space for honesty.
23:35Not every person is capable of receiving what you've come to understand.
23:39And that's not cynicism.
23:41That's strategy.
23:42Schopenhauer believed that deep thinkers must live differently.
23:46Not in fear.
23:47But in discernment.
23:48Because when you speak truth to those who aren't ready.
23:51You don't enlighten them.
23:52You provoke them.
23:54And in doing so, you suffer needlessly.
23:56So instead, be selective.
23:58Not secretive.
23:59Not fake.
24:00But intentional.
24:02Save your depth for those rare few who can meet you there.
24:05Seek out like-minded individuals.
24:07Even if they're few and far between.
24:10You may not find them on every street corner.
24:12But in books.
24:13In writing.
24:14In quiet places.
24:15They exist.
24:16And until you find them, Schopenhauer suggests something radical.
24:20Embrace solitude.
24:22Not as punishment.
24:23But as privilege.
24:24Solitude isn't the absence of people.
24:27It's the presence of clarity.
24:29It gives you space to think freely.
24:30To create.
24:31To observe.
24:33To develop insights without the constant pressure to simplify them for others.
24:37He believes solitude is where the mind becomes sharp.
24:40Where thinkers are forged.
24:42So, if you find yourself walking alone.
24:45Don't rush to fill the silence.
24:47Use it.
24:48To grow.
24:49To reflect.
24:50To understand.
24:51And most importantly.
24:53Don't waste your fire explaining it to those who only see smoke.
24:57Not every mind is ready for every truth.
24:59And that's okay.
25:01Your job isn't to force awakening.
25:03It's to stay awake.
25:04And when you do find someone who sees what you see.
25:08You won't have to speak loudly.
25:09You will just connect.
25:12If you have ever been rejected for thinking deeply.
25:14If you have been dismissed.
25:16Ignored.
25:17Or quietly pushed aside.
25:18Not for being wrong.
25:20But for seeing too clearly.
25:22You need to hear this.
25:23You are not a threat.
25:25You are a mirror.
25:27And what people fear.
25:28Is not you.
25:29But what your presence reveals.
25:31You reflect the parts of themselves they are not ready to face.
25:35You hold up a lens to the illusions they have built their lives around.
25:39And that kind of clarity.
25:41That kind of honesty.
25:43It's rare.
25:43It's powerful.
25:45And yes.
25:46It's often lonely.
25:47But loneliness is not failure.
25:49It's the natural result of walking a path few are willing to take.
25:53The deeper you go.
25:54The more distance you will feel.
25:56Not because you are lost.
25:58But because you are ahead.
26:00Schopenhauer saw this loneliness.
26:02Not as punishment.
26:03But as proof.
26:04Proof that your mind is awake.
26:06That your spirit seeks truth.
26:08Even when it costs you comfort.
26:10So don't let rejection turn into shame.
26:12Let it turn into recognition.
26:14Let it remind you.
26:16You are not broken.
26:18You're just living in a world that fears what you see.
26:21Keep thinking.
26:22Keep seeking.
26:23Keep reflecting.
26:24Even if it makes others uncomfortable.
26:26Because in the end.
26:28It's not the loudest voices that shape the world.
26:30It's the quiet ones.
26:32The ones who carry insight like fire.
26:34The ones who see what others can't.
26:36And refuse to look away.
26:38And if you have made it this far.
26:40You're one of them.
26:41You are not alone.
26:42You're just rare.
26:44Share your thoughts below.
26:46If this message resonated with you.
26:48Subscribe.
26:49We are just getting started.
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