This is why churches, temples, synagogues and any place of worship needs clear, comprehensive and effective abuse prevention policies-both for how it handles disclosures of abuse by its members or discovery of abuse by its leaders.
Much like schools, these organizations need to have accountability measures and its members must be the ones who demand transparency of those policies.
Otherwise abuse continues to be done in secrecy, abusers are protected and institutions are shielded from consequences for violating their duty of care.
Children deserve us having these difficult conversations so they can be protected.
I found out what it is that’s been driving me mad There’s no room to breathe between the good and the bad A crush in-between, there’s a thin, thin line But just ’round the corner, there’s a change in design
I wish I could walk away And dig what the preachers say But those words don’t satisfy me no more
There’s a crack There’s a crack in the world There’s a crack There’s a crack in the world There’s a crack There’s a crack in the world
Just fifty more years, we’re all gonna know Why, when, where, how, and who gets to go So let’s all have a good time before the great divide ‘Cause things will start separating come 2025
So look for the subtle clues It won’t make the front-page news That depends upon which side that you choose
There’s a crack There’s a crack in the world There’s a crack There’s a crack in the world, yeah There’s a crack There’s a crack in the world
Dear Women, have you ever realized how powerful your thoughts are for the man in your life?
Saka Ana Lorenza, a Kogi Saka and spiritual leader, speaks about the quiet but immense importance of women in the lives of their men. She explains that it is not only what women do or say that shapes a man’s path, but also what they think about him in the privacy of their own mind.
When a woman holds thoughts of trust, respect and blessing for her partner, this creates a field of support around him. Even when she is not physically present, he can walk with more strength, clarity and courage. Her inner agreement becomes a kind of spiritual protection that helps him move through obstacles and stay connected to his purpose.
When her thoughts are filled with constant criticism, disappointment or contempt, even if she never speaks them aloud, this too has an effect. The relationship may begin to feel heavy. Conflicts appear without a clear reason. Success may be blocked in subtle ways.
According to Saka Ana Lorenza, many women do not realize how central their inner stance is for the wellbeing of the man and for the harmony of the family.
This is not about blame. It is an invitation to remember the sacred influence that women carry. Their love and their clarity are not small. They are forces that can either nourish or weaken the life that grows around them.
The Kogi see relationship as a spiritual responsibility that both partners share. And the thoughts of the woman are one of its deepest foundations.
May your thoughts become a blessing for you and for those you love.
If a man can walk away from the woman who gave him everything her body, her heart, her sleepless nights, her dreams poured into building a family then his betrayal is limitless.
True character isn’t measured when life is easy. It’s measured in how he treats the hearts that once trusted him completely, in how he protects what he helped create.
When a mother is broken by someone who promised love, the wounds don’t stay with her alone.
They echo in the children who watch quietly, learning what trust, safety, and respect mean—or don’t.
They see the heart they should have been able to depend on crumble.
They internalize the fear, the doubt, and the uncertainty.
They begin to question what love should feel like, and whether it is reliable.
A real man does not destroy what made him a parent. He does not take for granted the devotion, the care, the nights spent worrying and planning and nurturing. He stands firm. He protects. He stays loyal. Not because it’s convenient, not because anyone is watching, but because it is sacred.
Betrayal is not just a personal failure. It is a fracture in the foundation of a home, a lesson taught to children that love can be abandoned.
And while wounds can heal, the reverberations linger unless accountability, care, and integrity are restored.
To honor the love that built a family, a man must remember: the women who gave him everything do not exist merely for convenience—they exist as pillars of life, love, and legacy. To abandon her is to abandon the sacred trust of parenthood, the love that shaped the next generation, and the respect that defines true character.
He may never be judged only by his words, but by how he protects, cherishes, and honors the hearts that once trusted him fully.
My husband didn’t pack his bags for a mistress. He packed them for a “movement.” He said he was suffocating in our silence, but the truth is, he was drowning in the noise.
We were the picture of the American Dream, circa 2024. Or maybe the caricature of it.
We had the house in the suburbs with the kitchen island that was too big to clean and a mortgage rate that kept us awake at night. We had two cars in the driveway and subscriptions to five different streaming services we never watched. But mostly, we had the glow.
That pale, blue, flickering glow.
For the last three years, Mark hadn’t really been in the room with me. He was in the comment sections. He was in the forums. He was fighting invisible wars against strangers who lived three thousand miles away. Dinner conversations used to be about our day, about the kids who were off at college, about the leak in the gutter.
Then, the conversations stopped. They were replaced by lectures.
He would look up from his phone, eyes bloodshot, and ask if I’d seen what “They” were doing to the dollar. What “They” were putting in the water. What “They” were teaching in schools. He never specified who “They” were, and frankly, depending on which channel he was watching, “They” changed every week.
I was exhausted. Not physically, but deeply, spiritually tired. I was tired of walking on eggshells in my own living room, afraid that mentioning the price of eggs would trigger a twenty-minute rant about supply chains and geopolitical conspiracies.
So when he stood by the door with his duffel bag, looking like a man preparing for a tactical mission rather than a mid-life crisis, I didn’t cry.
“I can’t do this anymore, Sarah,” he said. He sounded breathless, like he was running from something. “I need to find a place that’s real. I need to be around people who are awake. You… you’re just sleepwalking. You’re content to let the world burn as long as you have your garden and your coffee.”
He called it a “sabbatical for clarity.” He was going to drive out West, maybe join an off-grid community he’d found online. A place where “freedom still mattered.”
“And what about us?” I asked, leaning against the granite counter I still hadn’t paid off.
“I need to save myself first,” he said. “You should try waking up, Sarah. The world is ending.”
Then the door clicked shut. The engine revved. And he was gone.
I stood there in the hallway. I waited for the panic. I waited for the crushing weight of abandonment that every magazine article told me I should feel.
Instead, I heard it.
The silence.
The TV wasn’t blaring breaking news about a crisis I couldn’t solve. The phone wasn’t pinging with notifications about impending doom. The air in the house didn’t feel charged with static electricity anymore.
I walked to the living room and picked up the remote. I pressed the power button. The screen went black.
“Okay,” I whispered to the empty room. “The world is ending. So I might as well make dinner.”
The first week was strange. The silence was loud. But by the second week, I realized something terrifying: We had been working ourselves to death to maintain a lifestyle that was making us miserable.
I looked at the big house. It was a museum of things we bought to impress people we didn’t like. It was a storage unit for anxiety.
So, I did the unthinkable. I put the house on the market.
My friends were horrified. “But Sarah, the equity! But Sarah, where will you go? You need to downsize to a condo downtown, stay connected!”
I didn’t want a condo. I didn’t want “connected.” I wanted “grounded.”
I bought a small, drafty cottage two towns over. It needed a new roof and the floors creaked, but it had a front porch and a plot of land that got good morning sun. It reminded me of my grandmother’s house in the 80s—before everyone carried a computer in their pocket, back when neighbors actually knew each other’s names not because of a neighborhood watch app, but because they borrowed sugar.
I stopped watching the news. I figured if the world actually ended, someone would come knock on my door and tell me.
I started living a life that looked, from the outside, incredibly small.
I cancelled the subscriptions. I got a library card. I bought a second-hand radio that only picked up the local jazz station and the Sunday baseball games.
I started baking. Not the sourdough starter trend for Instagram, but real baking. I dug out my grandmother’s handwritten recipe cards, stained with butter and vanilla from forty years ago. There was something spiritual about kneading dough. It was physical. It was real. You couldn’t argue with flour; you just had to work with it.
One afternoon, my internet went down. A year ago, this would have caused a meltdown in our household. Mark would have been screaming at the service provider. I would have been panicked about missing emails.
Now? I just made a cup of tea and sat on the porch.
A young woman walked by, pushing a stroller. She looked frazzled, a Bluetooth earpiece blinking in her ear, talking rapidly about quarterly projections. She stopped when she saw me.
“Everything okay?” she asked, pointing at my house. “Power’s out on the whole block. No Wi-Fi.”
“I know,” I smiled. “Would you like a slice of apple pie? It’s still warm.”
She looked at me like I was an alien. Then, she looked at the pie. She touched her earpiece and tapped it off.
“I… I would love that,” she sighed, her shoulders dropping three inches.
We sat on the porch steps. We didn’t talk about the election. We didn’t talk about the stock market. We talked about how hard it is to keep hydrangeas blue. We talked about how fast her baby was growing. We talked about the smell of rain before a storm.
For an hour, we were just humans. Not voters, not consumers, not demographics. Just humans eating pie.
“It feels like time moves slower here,” she said, wiping a crumb from her lip. “I feel like I remember this feeling, but I don’t know from where.”
“It’s not memory,” I told her. “It’s presence. We used to live like this. We just forgot we could.”
Three months later, Mark called.
The connection was crackly. He was somewhere in the desert. The “community” hadn’t worked out—too many arguments about leadership, too few people willing to clean the latrines. Now he was in a motel, looking for the next big thing.
“It’s chaos out here, Sarah,” he sounded smaller, older. “The country is falling apart. You have no idea. I’m just trying to find a signal so I can upload my vlog.”
“I’m sorry, Mark,” I said, and I meant it.
“What are you doing?” he asked. “Are you still… asleep?”
I looked around my kitchen. There was a bowl of fresh tomatoes on the counter. A stack of paperback books on the table. The radio was playing a soft saxophone melody. The window was open, and I could hear the neighbor’s kids playing tag, their laughter cutting through the summer air.
I wasn’t asleep. I was the most awake I had ever been.
“No, Mark,” I said gently. “I’m just living.”
“But how can you live when everything is at stake?” he demanded, his voice rising with that old, familiar panic. “Don’t you care about the future?”
“I am building the future,” I said. “I’m building it right here. By keeping my peace. By feeding my neighbors. By refusing to let the noise inside my house.”
He didn’t understand. He hung up to go chase another phantom, another outrage, another digital war.
I put the phone down. I didn’t check social media to see if he posted about our call. I didn’t check my bank account to soothe my anxiety.
I went back to the dough on the counter. I pressed my hands into it, feeling the resistance, the elasticity, the promise of something rising.
We spend so much time screaming for a better world that we forget to build a decent life. We think freedom is having a million choices, a million channels, a million voices in our pockets.
But I learned the truth in a creaky house with a broken internet connection.
Freedom isn’t about escaping the system. It’s about unplugging from the fear.
It’s realizing that the “Good Old Days” aren’t a time you can travel back to. They are a state of mind you have to fight for, right here, right now.
And one thing is certain: Happiness doesn’t come from having the loudest voice in the room. It comes when you realize you no longer need to shout to be heard. You just need to be whole.
The Magistrate is the Planetary Stabilizer. She’s the Planetary Gatekeeper. Her roots are in the deepest depths. Her crown is in the high heavens. She is the Energizer, the Magnifier, the Mother. She has Rainbow Covenant with the Most High God.
These “men” are at war with God over this woman being in Status. Their intention is to copycat and replace her. They want the wealth. She is refusing to offer services to them. They tortured her family, genetically altered them, tried to exterminate them. They must leave the planet. They have no such intention. There looks to be a final, big fight to occur. Nasty Jack is trying to “crown” a man puppet as Prince of peace. They want to put a puppet in the Magistrates position. They want control of the planet.
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Did you know Israel gave Trump the Silver Crown of the Torah and title of Messiah, Prince of Peace? Did you know they say he played everyone with the shots, that the intent is to k!ll the “Adam” lineage?
We are connected to so much!!! We’ve been put into a little box and given a tiny script to form our lives to. There is a vast ocean of depth and width, total peace or massive destruction, and all the “benders” of the elements are present. We’ve been told it is taboo to speak of it, to hear of it, that we must erase it from memory or be punished. No one speaks of the Pantheon … because the Pantheon is You … Sons and Daughters Divine, Rebirthed.
We’ve cycled through life and death so many times, wishing many cultures. We’ve carried many identities, many of whom have had stories written of them.
We are more than this single incarnation.
ie:
A pantheon refers to the collective gods of a mythology (like the Greek or Roman pantheon) or a temple dedicated to all gods, most famously the ancient Roman structure in Rome, now a church, known for its massive dome. It can also mean a group of revered people (like in literature) or a public building honoring national heroes, such as France’s Pantheon in Paris. Key MeaningsReligion/Mythology: The entire assembly of gods in a specific polytheistic religion (e.g., the Norse Pantheon).
Architecture (Rome): The ancient Roman temple (built by Hadrian) with a famous concrete dome, now the Basilica of St. Mary and the Martyrs. Architecture (General): A building (like the one in Paris) housing tombs or memorials for distinguished citizens. Figurative: The heroes, idols, or greatest figures of a particular field (e.g., “the pantheon of rock music”).
The Roman Pantheon (Temple) Origin: Originally a temple to “all gods” (from Greek pan- “all” + theos “god”).
Structure: A marvel of Roman engineering, featuring a massive dome with an oculus (opening) at the top. Current Use: Converted into a Catholic church in 609 AD, it serves as a burial place for Italian kings and artists like Raphael.
Sharing without bias in the effort to introduce the concept of thee great deception. Take it as it resonates. I feel this is why the “Rose” has been energetically harvested and forced into breeding programs, while “men” compete for their positions. This is also why men have been chemically castrated. Replaced. I do hope there will be a different reality shared for the planet … those in history have proven themselves traitor to their own oaths and commitments. All of them.
Over and over and over again they proclaim themselves conquerors over Woman.
⚕️MEDUSA: The Woman They Couldn’t Break
They never tell you the real story of Medusa. They just show you the monster: snakes for hair, eyes that turn men to stone.
But they don’t tell you why she became that way. They don’t want you to see yourself in her.
Medusa was once a beautiful, soft priestess. She served in Athena’s temple. She was pure, untouched, devoted to spirit.
Until one day, Poseidon, one of the gods, decided her body wasn’t hers. He took what he wanted. Violated her. Broke her. Stole her innocence.
That day, sweet Medusa realized her softness was a curse, her beauty a pawn for predatory males.
And the temple, the gods, the people… punished her. Accused her of seducing him. She was cursed. Not him.
From that moment on, she was cast out. Banished, demonized, transformed into something “ugly”. Not because she became evil, but because she was no longer willing to play nice.
They called her dangerous because she wouldn’t let another man come close. Because she could now freeze them with a stare. Not out of vengeance, but as protection.
Because when you’ve been hunted enough times, your softness becomes a fortress.
Medusa became what the world forced her to be: not a monster, but a mirror.
She reveals the shadow in men. She exposes what they carry inside.
Those who approach her with fear or domination turn to stone.
Those who come in peace… simply turn away, unready to face themselves.
She is the face of the woman who has had enough. Enough betrayal. Enough abandonment. Enough “be gentle, be kind, be forgiving” while being ripped apart.
She reminds us that when women are left to defend themselves, they become fire. They become storm. They become legend.
If you’ve been told you’re “too aggressive,” “too angry,” “too guarded”, maybe you’re just protecting the girl no one else protected.
Maybe it’s them, not you.
Medusa is not a villain. She is a survivor. A symbol of feminine rage alchemized into power. She is every woman who had to become her own shield.
In the age of the feminine rising, Medusa returns. Not to punish but to warn. To teach women that it’s okay to say never again. To guard your sacred body. To let your fury be holy. To wear your scars like armor.