In the folds of modernity, amid flashing notifications and algorithms that devour moments, a war is being waged without proclamations.
It is not a matter of breached privacy or stolen data, but of a subtler erosion: the loss of the sacred space where the human being listens to himself. It is in this denied silence that the fate of our spiritual autonomy is decided.
Science today confirms what mystics have whispered for millennia: the human brain, bombarded with 10,000 digital stimuli each day, is losing its capacity to generate inner silence. A 2024 MIT study found that 73 % of people under 35 experience anxiety after just 20 minutes without devices, a symptom of a dependence that is no longer merely technological but existential. We are externalizing our consciousness; every like, every scroll, is a concession of sovereignty. We become avatars of ourselves.
Yet, in the cracks of this attentional collapse, unexpected resistances are blooming. True protection is not about blocking screens but about rebuilding the sanctuary within.
What happens when silence itself becomes a threat? Anthropologists at the London School of Esoteric Studies have long mapped a disturbing phenomenon: 41 % of participants in sensory‑isolation experiments report encounters with “non‑human presences.” These are not hallucinations; they are the psyche, deprived of background noise, beginning to dialogue with buried archetypes. For some, it is illumination; for others, a labyrinth without exit.
The solution? A return to active protection, a revolutionary concept that fuses quantum psychology with an inner martial art. It is not about amulets or rituals, but about cultivating what is called the cosmic art of “No.” Every digital “yes” is a “no” to oneself. Resisting means becoming a black hole: absorbing chaos without returning energy.
The paradox burns brightly: the more technology advances, the greater the need to return to the primordial root of humanity. Perhaps, as Jung suggested, “Only those who have lost everything can rediscover the essential.” In a world where even dreams are monetized, the revolutionary act is simple: turn off, breathe, and listen to the void that contains everything.
As an anonymous hacker‑turned‑digital hermit put it: “The real dark web lives inside us, and the only firewall that matters is built one ‘No’ at a time.”
RVSCB




















