The rainfall not seen in a hundred years. Temperatures unprecedented in history. Tornadoes destroying cities. Every day — a new blow from nature. Argentina, Italy, Russia, USA, France...
This is a chronicle of natural disasters over just one week, from May 14 to 20, 2025. But in reality, it is a chronicle of the future.
So why is this global problem looming over humanity being ignored so stubbornly? Today, you’ll get an answer to that question.
Perhaps after watching another video about climate disasters, you feel a deep internal question arise: “Why is this threat looming over humanity being ignored? We urgently need to do something.”
If that’s what you feel, then you're someone for whom conscience and the pursuit of truth aren’t just words — they hold deep meaning for you.
But have you noticed that just two days later, the urgency of the problem fades away? What seemed clear, important, and demanding immediate action becomes distant and loses its relevance — your mind just switches to something else.
Do you know why that happens? It’s a psychological defense mechanism built into us: when we are faced with frightening information, especially if it concerns a problem we feel we personally can't affect — our consciousness tries to protect itself. It pushes the disturbing knowledge aside and whispers, “Later. Not now. This isn’t about me.” And we agree with it.
At the root of this psychological paralysis is fear. We fear change, we fear consequences, and most of all, we fear taking responsibility for our own fate and the fate of our loved ones.
It is precisely this fear that turns us into spectators rather than participants.
But when disaster eventually strikes, every person asks the same question: “Why? Why me?”
The answer is simple: because when you had the choice to hear the truth or turn away, you turned away. When there was still time to act, you hesitated, delayed, and didn’t pass the truth on to others.
The problem is not a lack of solutions. The knowledge and technology to deal with the climate crisis already exist!
But to put them into action, the participation of everyone is needed. This is the personal responsibility of each of us.
There is no one else.
And if we don’t start acting, no one will do it for us.
Leave a comment