: Remembering the Wonder, Reclaiming the Future
So much has changed in the last 40 years.
Sometimes, I sit and think about how we lived in the late 1980s—how simple and grounded life felt, even with its limitations. In the 1990s, society began shifting. New ideas, cultures, and technologies started connecting us more than ever before. Then the 2000s brought a digital boom—suddenly, we were all plugged in. What once seemed distant and futuristic became everyday reality.
Now, in the 21st century, even people in rural villages in so-called “third world” countries have access to cell phones, video cameras, and instant communication. We’ve developed tools powerful enough to document injustice, reconnect families, and bring global change. The promise of technology is vast—and yet, something deeply human seems to have gotten lost in the mix.
Selfishness has crept in and become normalized. We’ve become more self-focused in a world that is more interconnected than ever. That’s a strange contradiction, isn’t it? In the past, we had fewer tools but more interdependence. Today, we have global networks at our fingertips, yet often forget our responsibilities to each other.
I want to use my website to remind people of the wonder that still exists. Of the power we hold to help each other grow. To share knowledge, restore lost hope, and build a new kind of freedom rooted in cooperation—not division.
Technology is not the problem. It’s what we do with it that matters. Let’s choose to use it with intention—to reconnect, to support, and to remember that a better world is still possible if we act together.
Let this space be a beacon for that vision.


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