You’re Not a Victim of Your Feed
The case for emotional responsibility in a culture addicted to blame and censorship.
No one “Out There” Is Making You Feel Anything
Let’s clear something up:
Your feelings aren’t coming from the world.
They’re not coming from a post, a person, a politician, or a headline.
They’re coming from one place — your thinking, in this moment.
That’s it.
The idea that other people cause your emotions?
That’s the illusion.
That’s the lie.
And right now, it’s not just active — it’s on steroids.
We’ve gone beyond blame.
People are being demonized.
Not just disagreed with — dehumanized.
All because someone feels something they don’t like and believes someone else must be responsible for it.
So what do we do?
We cancel.
We censor.
We assign good vs. evil, safe vs. dangerous — as if the only path to emotional peace is to silence or eliminate the people we think are “causing” our discomfort.
But here’s the thing:
No one “out there” can climb inside your mind and pull emotional levers.
That’s not how human experience works.
It never has and never will.
Every feeling is born from thought.
Your thought. In real time.
Not from them.
Not from “out there.”
From you — always from you.
The moment you see this,
👉 Blame becomes unnecessary.
👉 Demonization becomes absurd.
👉 And censorship becomes a waste of energy.
Because when you understand that your experience is an inside job, you stop outsourcing your peace to someone else’s silence.
You’re not a victim of the feed.
You’re the creator of your experience — whether you realize it or not.
Want your power back?
Start there.