The Weight of Being Seen by Roy Dawson Earth Angel Master Magical Healer



The Weight of Being Seen

by Roy Dawson Earth Angel Master Magical Healer

I’ve had this conversation with everyone — from business tycoons to the well-connected and wealthy.
And they all say the same thing:

“Well Roy, that’s just not how things work. That’s not how the system operates.”

And I say:
Exactly. That’s the damn problem.

Look at all the money wasted attacking itself. Smear campaigns. Endless political games. We’ve spent enough tearing each other down to house every homeless person in this country.
And let’s talk about the fires — natural and manmade. Everything seems to burn while the system pretends it’s sacred.
But the moment you speak up, the moment you defend yourself, they say:
“Sit down. Be quiet. How dare you question the system.”

Here’s the truth:
The system doesn’t work. Not for most of us.

It’s built to divide.
To confuse.
To keep people and leaders on different pages, always frustrated, always exhausted, always doubting.

It burns through your time and your mind.
Sure, the poor suffer more — always have.
But even the rich get trapped in the loop, spinning in circles, grinding their gears.
They won’t admit it. But it’s true.

We weren’t built to live like this.

A system that turns us against each other?
It leads to war.
It breeds crime.
It punishes honesty.
It rewards control.

So what do we do?

We stop pretending the system is sacred.
We stop clinging to it just because it's check here what we know.
We sit down — all of us — and fix it. Together.
Make it work for everyone.
Now let’s talk about leadership.

When you’re a leader, people watch.
They notice how you enter a room.
They notice if your hands tremble.
They clock your silence — every pause before you speak.

They don’t mean to dissect you.
But they do.

And when you’re carrying the weight, you feel every single eye on you.
Every expectation.
Every judgment.

You don’t want to let them down.
You don’t want to crack.
So you stand tall, even when your spine aches.
You speak clearly, even when your chest feels like it might cave in.

Because that’s what they expect.

But here’s the part people don’t want to talk about:

People get uncomfortable when their leader looks human.
When a leader cries.
When they say “I don’t website know.”
When they look tired.

It rattles them.
Makes the ground feel unsteady.

But that’s not weakness.
That’s real.

Leaders get angry.
Leaders get tired.
Leaders cry.

But the true ones?
They get back up.
They keep going.
Even if they limp. Even if they’re scared.

We’ve got to stop expecting gods from people who were never meant to be more than human.

We lift them up — then we tear them down the moment they bleed.

That cycle?
It breaks people.
And it breaks the world.

We don’t need perfect leaders.
We need honest ones.

We need leaders who show up — broken, maybe — but still trying.
Still carrying the weight, even when it gets heavier by check here the day.

And we, as people, need to be better at how we treat them.
Because when we offer grace instead of judgment, love instead of fear,
we don’t just lift them — we lift ourselves.

The measure of a leader isn’t perfection.
It’s website how they carry their flaws.
It’s how they keep walking with the weight of a world on their back.

And the check here measure of a people?

It’s how we treat the ones still standing...
even when everything around them is falling apart.

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