This society is rapidly becoming a place where I no longer want to live — and it’s happening far more quickly than I expected.
It’s hard for me to be certain whether the world is the problem or if it’s really just me. Maybe what we’re going through is normal and I simply hate “the new normal.” (I detest that phrase.) Maybe I would deal with it better if it weren’t for my childhood programming.
I’m sure it’s some of both. But wherever the specifics lie, I’m feeling overwhelmed and so are lots of others. Maybe you’re feeling a bit of the same. Or maybe there’s some feeling in your gut that you’re trying to ignore.
In 1970, the futurist Alvin Toffler published a book called “Future Shock,” which he described as a psychological state of individuals and entire societies — who are experiencing “too much change in too short a period of time.”
The world was already changing quickly, but it’s accelerated. What‘s worse, it feels as though we’re passengers in a car being driven by a madman — and the madman is gunning the engine as he steers us all off the edge of a cliff.
If you’re not terrified, you’re not paying attention.

Can I reconnect with inner child who saw the world differently?
I was agonizingly slow to ‘get it,’ but the joy of music changed me
Pursuit of dream pushes singer closer to stardom since we met
Psychiatrist’s insight might be link between spiritual, material worlds
Nature made me like my mother, but my father tried to erase that
Should a rational person question orthodox assumptions on climate?
‘Dad, is there really a Santa Claus?’ Should we lie to kids or tell truth?
If voting really changed anything, governments would make it illegal