A common reaction among humans when first contemplating the pole shift as
presented by us, is to think that the better option is to go out with the
tidal waves, go down under quake debris, or be blown against a wall by
high winds and have it all over with quickly. Most survivors of
multiple pronged disasters sit stunned until death overtakes them. Imagine
the World Trade Center disaster, without rescue. No food stuffs
brought in, no financial rescue, no media attention. This is in essence a
depression, where less and less is done, as time passes. Illness sets in,
and those stunned and unable to see a way out are at last given their way
out, quietly.
We present a scenario of struggle to survive in the first place, with
travel and terror and living a dual life of uncertainty due to the
establishment cover-up. Getting past that as a short term problem, the
larger problem looms like a dark cloud. Life in the Aftertime is fraught
with dying forests, lack of livestock or flocks or wildlife to eat, and
gardens that will not flourish. Add to this the description of a Mad Max
world, where a set of laws and a governing body will be nonexistent or
turned toward self-service, marauding gangs and the need to live forever
in a low-profile mode to survive. Then the time frame of a 25 years
volcanic gloom, with climate change requiring vegetation to adjust as well
as try to re-grow, and it seems a long way off before one can
sit on the porch in the evening, enjoying the evening. Those with children
despair that they will be educated, will live to adulthood without health
problems besetting them, rotting teeth, painful disease, only to find they
are bearing offspring into a world that is a nightmare. Those in poor
health envision that they will become a burden on others, fear this will
occur in slow steps so they will be unaware of it, perhaps senile or
comatose due to starvation, and unable to control their life at all.
Thus, there are huge worries to anyone taking the message
semi-seriously, and the first thought is that this is a nightmare to be
avoided. So, given this perspective, what IS there to live for?