The right, small step in the right direction is a vast step forward for mankind!

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readNov 2, 2021

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Question from the Internet:

You describe a potentially positive change when a small minority could save humanity with the right method. So the question now is how many of us does it take to make a difference? The second question, just as important is how many of us does it take to make this dream impossible?

Very important questions!

For answers, first of all, we need to understand that the process of development is not in our hands, we are not in control. The “dream” — a global human society that lives in a Nature-like mutual integration, acting as a single, healthy, living organism — is going to unfold with or without our consent.

The question is only if it unfolds through beatings, crisis situations getting worse to the brink of self-destruction, or we become wise and learn, accept what Nature demands from us and flow with evolution willingly, consciously.

The large masses — still blindly instinctive — can do nothing, they will be pushed, pulled through the inevitable blows, suffering. But a small, “critical mass” can pull the whole mass behind them towards safety.

Certain calculations describe such a “critical mass” 10–15% of any given society, group, environment, as their quality, purposeful activity overcomes the passive, helpless masses that simply want a better life, day-to-day survival.

Those who feel they want to belong to the “peak”, to the pioneers initiating, guiding this unprecedented human transition need to focus on themselves and on their mutual work at this stage. With their positive, methodical, purposeful actions they can harness, mobilize unique Natural forces which are “interested in” helping humanity to align with evolution’s flow.

What they do will be a “small individual (that they do together) step but a huge step for mankind” in every sense!

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Zsolt Hermann
Zsolt Hermann

Written by Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.

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