Friday, May 29, 2026

FREEDOM, NATURE, AND THE LAWS THAT GOVERN US ALL


Laws change. Cultures shift. What one generation outlaws, the next celebrates. But the Laws of Nature moves to a different rhythm entirely, unhurried, unbothered by opinion polls or parliamentary majorities. It simply is. And it is against that adamantine, quieter standard that the question of same-sex intimacy deserves to be honestly examined.

I reflected on this question in an earlier essay titled Is Homosexuality a Natural Phenomenon?, published in March 2011, which you can read here: https://samueli.blogspot.com/2011/03/is-homosexuality-natural-phenomenon.html. I return to it now with fresh eyes, a quieter tone, and a deeper angle.

Many countries have legalized same-sex relationships. Some churches have opened their doors to same-sex unions. And in the court of public opinion, particularly in the West, the matter is increasingly treated as closed. But legality has never been a reliable compass for morality or naturalness. Slavery was once legal. So was colonialism. The law reflects the consciousness of the moment, not the permanence of truth.

Human beings are endowed with free will. This is not a small gift. It is the very engine of growth, responsibility, and spiritual development. We must therefore be careful never to reduce any person to their choices, nor to treat difference with contempt. Discrimination, cruelty, and exclusion are on their own violations of a higher law. Every human being carries dignity that must be honored.

And yet, free will does not suspend the Laws of Nature. It never has. Nature operates by principles that are not negotiated by legislation or popular sentiment. The design of the human body, the complementarity of male and female, the architecture of reproduction, the energies that govern attraction at their deepest level: these speak a language that is older than any parliament. 

The more honest conversation is not whether same-sex intimacy should be criminalized, because persecution solves nothing and teaches less. The more useful question is one that each person must bring to their own conscience quietly and courageously: am I acting out of genuine inner conviction or am I simply surrendering to willful stubbornness, satisfying a passing whim, and refusing to look deeper? These are not comfortable questions. But they are necessary ones.

There is also a deeper dimension worth considering. Each soul, on setting out on its journey of spiritual maturation, made a foundational choice, a choice of sex that reflected the nature of its inner activity. That choice remains relevant across earthlives. To be unfaithful to it, persistently and willfully, is not without consequence. Those who stray too far from that original orientation risk finding themselves, in later incarnations, clothed in bodies that do not reflect who they originally chose to be. The repercussions of such distortion are not merely abstract. They manifest as a deep inner restlessness and confusion, a dissonance between the outer form and the inner self. It is precisely this condition that leads many to declare, with genuine anguish, that though they are outwardly one sex, they feel inwardly that they belong to another. That cry deserves compassion, not ridicule. But it also deserves honesty. What such a person is encountering is not a new identity to be celebrated but a distortion accumulated over time, one that calls not for entrenchment but for sober reflection. The way forward is not to deepen the confusion by acting it out, but to pause, look inward with courage, and resolve to return to faithfulness, to stay true to what one originally and freely chose to be. Faithfulness, then, is not merely a social or moral virtue. It is a spiritual safeguard. It protects the integrity of the soul's journey and keeps one aligned with the path chosen at the very beginning. That kind of faithfulness, quiet, inner, and self-directed, is worth more than any law a parliament can pass.

Natural law asks something demanding of every person regardless of orientation or identity. It asks us to look inward, to examine the forces that shape our desires, and to ask whether we are growing toward our highest nature or drifting away from it. That is a question for every human conscience, not just some.

We are free. But freedom exercised without wisdom becomes its own kind of bondage. The invitation, then, is not to judge one another. It is to reflect, with honesty and humility, on the laws that govern all of us equally, and to let our choices reflect that we wish only to act in accordance with them.


Friday, May 22, 2026

BEFORE THE BODY SPEAKS, LET THE SOUL BE HEARD

 


When is the right time? It is the question every courting heart eventually faces, and almost everyone answers it too quickly. Not by the calendar. Not by how long two people have known each other. Not by social status or the silent pressure of what others seem to be doing. These are surface questions yielding surface answers. What actually governs this is something far more serious, something that bypasses the visible entirely and reaches into the quiet interior of both souls. Two requirements, not one, and both must be fully present before the body has any business speaking at all. The first is purity of thought on both sides. Not self-deception, not romanticised lust dressed in the language of love, but genuine clarity of intention. The second is deeper still: a perfect spiritual harmony between both souls, a quiet convergence of inner worlds so complete that physical union becomes not a starting point but a natural culmination, the body finally expressing what the spirit has long already known. Where either of these is absent, what follows is not intimacy but transaction. And transaction, however pleasurable in the moment, quietly empties the soul. This is not merely true outside marriage. It holds just as firmly within it. For where there is no spiritual harmony, even a marriage bed becomes, in the truest sense, a place of dishonour for both parties.

Courting is itself a sacred act of discovery. Two people are learning whether their inner worlds are compatible, their values, their tenderness, their vision of life together. Sex introduced prematurely often short-circuits this delicate process. The body speaks loudly. The spirit speaks softly. And when the body dominates too soon, the spirit's voice becomes harder to hear.

The true price of casual sex is rarely visible on the surface; it is paid inwardly, in the slow erosion of self-knowledge and the quiet loss of one's own moral compass. The lingering emotional residue after a loveless encounter is real. Guilt, quiet confusion, a faint erosion of self-worth are the body's way of signaling that something sacred was treated as something disposable.

True chastity, it must be understood, is not physical abstinence. It is purity of thought. Even within physical union, chastity can reign where both hearts are honest, where no one is being used, where spiritual harmony already exists between two people. The body in such a union is not debased. It is elevated. Physical union in this light becomes something quietly powerful, an intimate exchange that produces not emptiness but greater strength in both souls.

So the question, when is the right time, answers itself naturally when two people stop asking how far can we go and start asking how deeply do we truly know one another. When thought is pure, when harmony is real, when the soul has been fully heard, the body follows without shame and without regret.

The soul speaks first. The body, at its best, simply agrees.


Friday, May 15, 2026

UFOs, BELIEF, AND THE LIMITS OF PROOF

 


Recent declassifications of more than 160 U.S. government files on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena have once again revived global fascination with UFOs, extraterrestrial life, and the possibility of contact with non-human intelligence.

What is often overlooked, however, is that official investigations into such phenomena have been ongoing in various forms since the 1940s. Across decades, governments, military institutions, scientists, and intelligence agencies have examined pilot sightings, radar anomalies, infrared footage, unexplained aerial events, and other unresolved reports.

Yet after all these decades of inquiry, no conclusive evidence of extraterrestrial life or non-human technology has been publicly established.

The released materials reveal something more restrained than many headlines suggest. They show uncertainty, incomplete data, unexplained observations, and the enduring difficulty of separating fact from interpretation. Intriguing cases remain unresolved, but unresolved does not automatically mean extraterrestrial.

This distinction matters.

Human beings have always been drawn to the unknown. Where evidence is incomplete, imagination often rushes in to fill the gaps. Mystery can easily become mythology, especially in an age shaped by films, speculation, social media narratives, and the human desire for answers larger than ourselves.

At the same time, there is also a deeper philosophical question beneath the fascination. Perhaps the greater challenge of human existence is not the search for intelligent life somewhere else in the universe, but the development of wisdom, truthfulness, and inner clarity within our own earthly existence. It may well be that humanity still struggles to fully understand itself, even as it looks outward toward distant worlds.

History also teaches caution against turning limited observations into sensational certainty. In the late 19th century, astronomers believed they had discovered “canals” on Mars and confidently speculated about an advanced civilisation struggling to survive on a dying planet. Newspapers amplified the claims, popular imagination exploded, and stories of intelligent Martians soon entered global culture. Yet improved science later showed the so-called canals were merely optical illusions. Even the famous 1938 radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds triggered public panic from a fictional Martian invasion. To this day, there remains no confirmed evidence of extraterrestrial life or intelligence beyond Earth.

None of this proves that extraterrestrial life does not exist. The universe is vast beyond comprehension, and science continues to explore it with remarkable progress. But intellectual seriousness requires a distinction between possibility and proof.

The honest position today is neither dismissal nor confirmation, but disciplined uncertainty.

We can remain open to discovery while resisting the temptation to convert ambiguity into certainty before the facts genuinely allow it.




Friday, May 08, 2026

TRIAL OR TRANSFORMATION?



There are seasons in life when everything feels like it is turning against you. Doors that once opened easily begin to resist. People you trusted grow distant. Effort increases, yet results shrink. Quietly, a question forms: am I going through trials, or has my fortune changed for the worse?

It is a heavy question, but it may be the wrong starting point. What if nothing has gone wrong? What if what you call a trial is life being intelligently reorganised around your growth? What if discomfort is not punishment, but direction?

There is a deeper way of seeing life that most people miss. Obstacles are not merely interruptions. They are information. Sometimes they are not blocking you; they are redirecting you. What feels like delay may be protection from a version of success you are not yet prepared to carry. Seen this way, life becomes less random and more instructional.

Difficulty can be interpreted in only two ways. Either it is happening to you, or it is happening for you. The first creates frustration and exhaustion. The second produces curiosity and inner clarity. The situation may be identical, but interpretation changes everything.

If you reflect honestly on your hardest seasons, you may notice a pattern. You did not only lose things; you also became sharper. You did not only face setbacks; you developed depth. Pressure did not only strain you; it revealed resilience you did not know you had. The real question is not whether life is hard, but what it is building in you.

Nothing in human experience is wasted. Actions carry consequences. Seasons produce outcomes. Inner intentions eventually shape external realities. This is why two people can pass through the same event and emerge differently. One breaks. The other is refined. The difference is not the event, but how it is processed internally.

Here, will becomes decisive. It is not merely desire but direction. A weak will resists life and sees every obstacle as a wall. A strengthened will collaborates with experience and turns obstacles into stepping stones. The question then shifts from why this is happening to what it is shaping in you.

Life does not always remove pressure. Sometimes it increases it to expand capacity. Pressure, understood correctly, is not an enemy but a trainer. Even mistakes are not wasted. They return as lessons, consequences, or delayed clarity, but always as movement toward our growth and maturity.

Eventually, the inner dialogue changes. You stop asking why this is happening to you and begin asking what it is growing in you. You stop seeing reversal and begin to notice transformation.

In the end, freedom is not the absence of difficulty, but the ability to remain steady while life shapes you. Because nothing is wasted, and nothing is random for long. The only real question is whether you are willing to let experiences transform you.


Friday, May 01, 2026

IS ANXIETY ABOUT TOMORROW REALLY NECESSARY?

 



I have noticed something curious about anxiety.

It rarely announces itself as anxiety.

It shows up dressed as responsibility.

It feels like planning. Like foresight. Like being “on top of things.”

But if you watch it closely, it is often just the mind living in a tomorrow that has not arrived… and may never arrive in the form we imagine.

And yet it consumes today as though tomorrow is already happening.

That, to me, is the quiet trick of anxiety.

The strange thing is that most of what we fear about tomorrow is not even tomorrow. It is imagination rehearsing scenarios, most of which never show up in real life.

We suffer in advance for events that often never come.

And when they do come, they rarely arrive with the same weight we assigned to them in our minds.

I have also begun to suspect something deeper about life itself.

Life is not as unstable as it looks when we are anxious.

There is a certain order beneath everything, even when the surface feels noisy.

Things tend to hold together more than they fall apart.

And when the mind can quietly align with that order, something interesting happens: it stops overworking itself.

It begins to breathe again.

It also seems to me that human thought is more powerful than we usually admit.

It can either amplify fear or create clarity.

The same inner energy that produces worry can also produce calm direction.

So anxiety is never just a feeling sitting quietly in the corner.

It is actually a direction the mind is taking.

And direction matters.

I have noticed something simple but important over time.

When I am anxious about tomorrow, I am not really preparing for it.

I am mentally exhausting myself before it arrives.

But when I am calm, even uncertain situations seem more manageable when they eventually show up.

It is almost as if clarity itself is a form of readiness.

And then there is this quiet truth experience keeps teaching us:

Most of the things we once feared… never happen.

And even the ones that do happen rarely destroy us.

They usually refine us, stretch us, or redirect us.

But they almost never match the size they had in our imagination.

So perhaps the real question is not whether tomorrow is uncertain.

It is whether we will allow anxiety to live in it ahead of us.

Because in doing so, we lose the only space we actually have power over: today.

And maybe that is enough for now.

Not perfect control of tomorrow.

Just a calmer presence in today.


Friday, April 24, 2026

WE ARE NOT ADDICTED TO PHONES; WE ARE AVOIDING OURSELVES


It is easy to blame the phone. The endless scrolling, the constant notifications, the reflex of reaching for it in silence. But the deeper truth is less about technology and more about avoidance. The phone has simply become a convenient hiding place.

Many people do not pick up their phones because they are curious. They pick them up because stillness feels uncomfortable. Silence creates space, and space brings questions we are not always ready to answer. So we fill it. We distract it. We outsource our attention.

In leadership, this pattern is even more pronounced. The modern leader is expected to be constantly available, constantly responsive, constantly “on.” Yet in that constant engagement, reflection is often the first casualty. Decisions become reactive rather than rooted. Presence becomes fragmented. And over time, even effectiveness suffers because clarity requires inner reflection. 

Self-awareness begins where distraction ends. It requires the courage to look within, and around us. To notice what we are feeling when we reach for the screen without thinking. To ask what thought or emotion we are avoiding in that moment. The same applies outwardly: when we are not present to people, we miss cues, meanings, and truths that do not announce themselves loudly.

There is also an inner voice most of us gradually drown out. It is not loud. It does not compete. It waits. And when we listen to it, something settles. Direction becomes clearer. Noise reduces. Peace is no longer something we chase but something we return to.

Perhaps the real discipline is not putting the phone down. It is picking ourselves up long enough to listen.

Because in the end, we are not trying to escape technology. We are trying to find peace! That comes from listening; listening to our inner voice. 


Friday, April 17, 2026

ONE DIVINITY, ONE PEACE


Across cultures and centuries, a simple truth keeps resurfacing.


Eloah (Hebrew) • Alaha (Aramaic/Syriac) • Allah (Arabic)

Different linguistic expressions that trace back to a shared Semitic root referring to the one God.


Shalom aleichem (Hebrew) • Shlama (Aramaic) • As-salamu alaykum (Arabic)

Different greetings across related languages, each carrying the same meaning: peace be upon you.


What is striking is not just the similarity of sound, but the shared moral direction embedded in them. These are not merely words. They are signposts shaped by language, culture, and scripture that point toward one central idea: the oneness of God and the primacy of peace in human relations.


Across traditions, faith has consistently called humanity upward, toward reverence for the Divine and responsibility toward one another. Different languages, same horizon.


Perhaps we have always been closer than we think.