Tag: War and soceity

  • The Quiet Inheritance Of War

    The Quiet Inheritance Of War

    War didn’t just pass through history—it settled into our behaviour. We adjusted, complied, and froze, mistaking survival instincts for wisdom, and scarcity for a way of life.

  • Zero Sum Narratives.

    Zero Sum Narratives.

    War teaches scarcity; minds tunnel, nations hoard, and even genes remember. The zero-sum narrative quietly mutates from policy into psychology, then into inherited biology.

  • Youth Disrupted.

    Youth Disrupted.

    War doesn’t just destroy cities; it quietly rewrites childhood—turning curiosity into caution, dreams into survival plans, and generations into adults too early to remember innocence.

  • Xenophobia

    Xenophobia

    XENOPHOBIA rarely announces itself—yet it quietly shapes war, policy, and memory, leaving behind suspicion, fractured identities, and a residue that returns later to the clinic.

  • Womens Burden

    Womens Burden

    After war ends, women inherit its longest aftermath—widowhood, caregiving, and invisible labour that sustains families, erodes health, and quietly props up fragile societies.

  • Value Reset

    Value Reset

    War reshapes values quietly; while my daughter discards, I remember scarcity—where nothing was wasted, everything repurposed, and even the smallest object carried dignity forward.