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Belonging

Belonging

“We believe we are the children of those who gave us a name, a home, an education, and a language. However, what begets us is not individuals, but a broader process that transcends family ties.
Nature is not an external entity to which we occasionally return. It is the constant source of our existence, the condition that makes every breath, gesture, and thought possible. Our parents pass on a specific history to us, but the body, sensitivity, and intelligence we receive spring from a source that predates any social genealogy. We are children of nature, not by choice, but by the force that ignited attraction, passion, and desire in our parents. Before any deliberate act, it was nature that brought them together, acting as origin and mediator.
Before belonging to a family, we belong to the world. And this is not limited to the margins of the human: it encompasses, surpasses, and sustains it without asking permission or rendering accounts. Awareness of this belonging does not detract from emotional ties. On the contrary: it frees them from possessive illusions and roots them in a vaster solidarity, without borders or privileges.
Remembering that we are children of nature does not mean denying our family history, but integrating it into a broader understanding of who we are and what we owe to the existence that made us possible.”
Prabhuji
Children

Children

“Sons and daughters do not belong to us. They are not a projection of our desires or an extension of our frustrations. They are unique and irreplaceable individuals with the right to write their own story.
By giving them life, we do not acquire authority over their destiny. We are only the means through which nature repeats and renews itself. Life was not given to us to be possessed, but to be continued. Raising children is not molding them in our own image, but accompanying them with respect as they emerge as individuals. The task of a parent is not to dictate the path, but to prepare the child to choose it. Limiting their freedom in the name of love is a form of control, of domination disguised as protection. Those who truly love, liberate. Those who fear, hold back.
We must humbly accept that children do not owe us eternal obedience, but lucid gratitude. We give them life and, with it, the inalienable right to live it as they see fit.”
Prabhuji