Once In A Blue Moon

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December 5, 2025

Article of the Day

Why someone might not appear happy on the outside but be happy on the inside

People may not appear happy on the outside while being happy on the inside for various reasons: In essence, the…
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Most people believe they are in control of their lives. They make choices, chase goals, react to circumstances, and call it free will. But beneath the surface, a different truth often reveals itself: we are all puppets. The difference is not whether we are controlled, but whether we can see the strings.

The strings are many. They are culture, biology, fear, memory, social conditioning, reward systems, trauma, habit, and environment. They tug at our thoughts, dictate our desires, and shape our actions long before we recognize their influence. Most people are moved by them without ever knowing. They defend opinions they inherited, chase dreams implanted by others, and live by rules they never chose.

To see the strings is not to escape them. It is to witness them. It is to notice the invisible architecture behind thought and behavior. The way a past failure steers current caution. The way a compliment creates dependence. The way media, tradition, and repetition mold values like hands shaping clay.

When you become aware of the strings, life changes. You no longer act purely out of instinct or programming. You begin to question what moves you. You begin to pause. The pause creates space, and in that space, a fragment of freedom appears. You are still a puppet, but now you can sometimes choose which strings to follow—and which ones to cut.

This awareness is not comfort. It is responsibility. To see the strings means you can no longer blame the world for your reactions. It means you must examine your role in your own conditioning. It means realizing that authenticity is not found, it is carved—slowly, painfully—from the scripted roles we’ve absorbed.

Being a puppet who sees the strings does not make you superior. It makes you accountable. It does not free you from control, but it reveals the machinery. It shows you how others are moved too. With compassion, not contempt. Because once you see the strings in yourself, you begin to see them in everyone else.

Power, then, lies in clarity. In naming the forces that shape you. In unmasking the illusions of choice and asking what remains. You may still move, but now you move with knowledge. You may still be pulled, but now you recognize the pull for what it is.

We are all puppets. But the puppet who can see the strings begins to write their own choreography. Not because the strings vanish, but because awareness gives shape to agency. And sometimes, that is enough.


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