The Inner Path, 1
Here is the first chapter of a 14-chapter essay titled The Inner Path, subtitled Modern Humanity in Search of a Forgotten Peace. The title of this opening chapter is A Modern Unease. It explores how, despite material progress, technology, and modern comfort, many people still experience an inner fatigue, a loss of meaning, and a vague sense of emptiness.
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Modern Humanity,
in Search of a Forgotten Peace
1. A Modern Malaise
Summary: Despite material progress, technology, and modern comfort, many people continue to experience inner fatigue, a lack of meaning, and a diffuse sense of emptiness. Between the mind’s constant agitation, the endless demands of modern life, and the growing difficulty of finding silence, many people live mechanically without truly living their own lives. This chapter explores this form of contemporary malaise and the idea that behind this inner fragmentation, another way of living may exist — more conscious, more stable, and more profound.
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For a long time, human beings believed that progress would naturally bring greater peace, comfort, and happiness. Many imagined that by reducing the hardships of work and developing knowledge, medicine, technology, and means of communication, existence would gradually become simpler and happier.
In some ways, this has happened. Many people today live with a level of material comfort previous generations could hardly have imagined. Yet despite these advances, a malaise continues to run through modern societies.
This malaise is not spectacular. It does not always take the form of a visible crisis. More often, it appears in quieter ways: diffuse fatigue, loss of motivation, permanent anxiety, lack of direction, a sense of emptiness, difficulty experiencing lasting joy, a constant need for stimulation, an unfulfilled search for happiness, or the strange feeling of missing one’s own life.
Many people sometimes feel as though they are living mechanically. They wake up, work, fulfill their obligations, seek moments of distraction or rest, and then begin again. Weeks pass, years as well, yet something within them remains unsatisfied. Even when everything seems to function outwardly, dissatisfaction — and sometimes bitterness — continues to grow.
As though life were moving forward without truly being lived.
This feeling has become so deeply rooted that it almost seems normal. Yet it reveals something important about life in modern Western societies.
Never before have people had access to so many sources of information or such freedom of movement. Never before have they been so constantly solicited. Screens, notifications, endless streams of images, opinions, and permanent urgencies occupy a considerable part of human attention. The mind is continually stimulated, pulled from one subject to another without ever being able to pause.
Many people end up living in a state of inner fragmentation and in the constant expectation that one endless cycle of crises will finally come to an end.
Silence becomes rare. Calm and rest as well. Even vacations are often filled with distractions. Many people feel a constant need to occupy their minds, as though silence or simply being alone had become uncomfortable.
Yet the permanent noise of the world often conceals a deeper reality: many people no longer really know why they are living. They pursue goals, projects, and obligations without clearly seeing what could give deep meaning to their existence.
Some seek success, others security, recognition, pleasure, or material accumulation. Yet even when these goals are achieved, feelings of lack, frustration, and incomprehension often remain. As though something essential — though difficult to name — were always escaping them.
This modern malaise does not come only from material difficulties. It also concerns the relationship human beings have with themselves.
From childhood onward, many people learn to build a social identity, succeed, compare themselves to others, and meet expectations. But few truly learn to know themselves. Few learn to look within, to understand why they live, or to question themselves deeply.
Their attention is turned almost entirely toward the world.
Little by little, existence becomes a succession of habits, tensions, and automatic patterns. Human beings act, think, react, desire, and worry without ever clearly knowing why.
Certain sages in the past compared this condition to a form of inner sleep. Not because human beings are incapable of consciousness, but because they live too often absorbed in the incessant movements of the world and the mind. They no longer perceive the stable point that exists behind the agitation.
This is probably why so many people feel a diffuse need to slow down, breathe, and rediscover simple and genuine things. Not necessarily to flee the world, but to stop living only in order to survive.
Deep down, the modern malaise may not simply be a social, psychological, or cultural crisis. It may also be the sign that an essential part of the human being has become lost and is asking to be rediscovered.
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