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Monday, 11 May 2026

HOLLYWOOD MAKES THEM, THEN HOLLYWOOD BREAKS THEM


There comes a point where people need to stop pretending that what keeps happening in HOLLYWOOD is “normal.” The patterns are too loud. The breakdowns are too public. The transformations are too disturbing. Too many people enter that machine full of life, innocence, creativity, and purpose, only to come out hollow, traumatized, addicted, spiritually drained, mentally fractured, or dead.

HOLLYWOOD sells dreams to the world, but behind the curtains, many leave with nightmares.

People go there in search of fame, recognition, wealth, applause, validation, and success. They enter looking bright-eyed, grounded, natural, conscious, and individual. Then suddenly, within years, months, or sometimes even days, they become unrecognizable versions of themselves. Their eyes change. Their energy changes. Their appearance changes. Their spirit changes. Some become dark, lifeless, erratic, rebellious, hypersexualized, drugged, emotionally unstable, or completely detached from who they once were.

It is deeper than fashion. Deeper than “artistic expression.” Deeper than entertainment.

Many become gothic replicas of themselves, carrying visible pain, confusion, torment, and spiritual emptiness in plain sight. The industry praises destruction as “reinvention.” It glorifies mental collapse as “freedom.” It markets brokenness as “evolution.”

And people keep clapping while human beings are being spiritually, emotionally, mentally, and physically consumed.

How many child stars have to spiral publicly before people understand something is deeply wrong? How many artists must overdose? How many celebrities must speak about exploitation, manipulation, abuse, humiliation rituals, addictions, depression, loss of identity, and trauma before society stops acting blind?

Too many enter innocent and leave destroyed.

Some never even make it out alive.

The world keeps calling it a coincidence, but the patterns continue repeating themselves over and over again. Premature deaths. Drug addictions. Public meltdowns. Identity crises. Emotional instability. Isolation. Self-destruction. Broken families. Suicides. Sudden personality shifts. Individuals are becoming almost unrecognizable from the people they once were.

People should already know by now that there is a real battle between good and evil taking place in this world. Not everything dark announces itself openly. Darkness often disguises itself as glamour, success, influence, luxury, power, money, and fame.

That is why discernment matters.

Watch the spiritual signatures.

Watch the energy.

Watch what happens to people after certain introductions, relationships, environments, contracts, industries, or influences enter their lives. If someone consistently changes for the worse, mentally, spiritually, emotionally, morally, physically, then whatever or whoever is influencing them is not bringing light into their life. It is draining them. Breaking them. Consuming them.

Light brings peace, clarity, growth, stability, wisdom, self-respect, healing, and truth.

Darkness brings confusion, chaos, destruction, addiction, emptiness, vanity, torment, and self-hate.

The signs are visible everywhere for those willing to see them.

This is not about worshipping celebrities. It is about recognizing that many human beings are being chewed up by systems that profit from their destruction, while the public watches it unfold as entertainment.

HOLLYWOOD often does not just create stars.

It creates casualties.

People need to wake up and stop blindly idolizing fame as the ultimate destination in life. Not every door that shines leads somewhere good. Some doors lead people into spiritual, emotional, and psychological destruction disguised as opportunity.

Protect your mind.
Protect your spirit.
Protect your identity.
Not every platform deserves your soul.

Hollywood is not the only place that breaks individuals to the core. There are extensions, chain links, and networks, people, environments, institutions, relationships, industries, and influences within societies across the nations of this world carrying the very same destructive motives. Some are determined to destroy the core, heart, mind, innocence, identity, and spirit of individuals and even children. Not every battle happens on a stage or behind cameras. Many are happening quietly in homes, schools, workplaces, communities, relationships, and everyday environments where darkness disguises itself as normality while slowly damaging human beings from within.


 

Sunday, 10 May 2026

When Celebration Becomes a Trigger: The Hidden Truth Behind Mother’s Day and Father’s Day

 



In societies across the world, it is no secret that many children have gone through, and are still going through, deep pain at the hands of the very people who were meant to protect them.

Not every person smiles when these programmed calendar events arrive. Not every individual rushes to buy flowers, cards, gifts, or post emotional tributes online, pretending that everything was beautiful inside their home. For many people, these system-structured days called Mother’s Day and Father’s Day are not celebrations at all. They are emotional wounds reopened by a society that constantly pushes a one-sided narrative while ignoring the painful realities millions endured behind closed doors.
The world has been conditioned to worship titles instead of examining character. The title “mother” or “father” automatically receives honor in many spaces, even when some individuals hiding behind those titles caused serious emotional, mental, physical, or spiritual damage to the very children they were supposed to protect. Many people walk around carrying scars that were not created by strangers, but by the hands of those they were told to trust the most.
Some people cannot genuinely call these individuals “mother” or “father” with love in their hearts because the memories attached to those titles are filled with fear, manipulation, abandonment, violence, neglect, humiliation, torment, alcoholism, narcissism, abuse, betrayal, and emotional starvation. Society rarely wants to speak honestly about this reality because people are conditioned to protect appearances more than truth.
Every year, the system aggressively pushes Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, and Valentine’s Day onto the masses through advertisements, social pressure, entertainment, businesses, schools, and social media campaigns. People are told what they should feel, what they should post, and how they should celebrate. Yet the same system rarely stops to acknowledge the people who become emotionally shattered during these periods because those dates trigger painful memories they have spent years trying to heal from.
For some, Mother’s Day is not a reminder of nurturing love. It is a reminder of being rejected, insulted, beaten, ignored, emotionally manipulated, or abandoned. For some, Father’s Day is not about guidance and protection. It is a reminder of violence, absence, intimidation, drunken rage, broken promises, sexual abuse, emotional coldness, or being made to feel worthless. These are realities many people silently carry while the world tells them to celebrate.
There are individuals who still yearn deeply for authentic parental love despite everything they endured. Especially abused children, even after being harmed, many still crave what they never truly had: safety, affection, reassurance, protection, gentleness, acceptance, and unconditional love. That longing reveals something powerful about the human spirit. Even after surviving darkness, many people still desire genuine connection and care. Some children grow into adults still secretly wishing someone would simply say, “You matter. You are safe. You are loved.”
The tragedy is that society often dismisses these individuals when they speak their truth. People are told things like:
“But that’s still your mother.”
“But that’s your father.”
“You must forgive and forget.”
“Honor your parents no matter what.”
This kind of thinking protects toxic behavior and silences victims. Respect should never become permission for abuse. Titles alone do not automatically equal righteousness, love, wisdom, or safety. Some people earned the title biologically, but completely failed spiritually, emotionally, and morally in the responsibility attached to it.
There are many people spending these holidays alone, not because they are bitter, but because they are healing. Some have chosen distance to protect their peace, sanity, and survival. Some had to cut ties with destructive parents in order to stop cycles of manipulation and trauma. That decision is not easy. It is one of the heaviest emotional burdens a person can carry, especially in a society that constantly romanticizes family while ignoring the damage some families cause.
The truth is this: not everyone came from loving homes. Not everyone had parents who sacrificed for them. Not everyone was protected. Not everyone was hugged. Not everyone was spoken to with kindness. Some people survived households that drained their spirit daily while the outside world called it “family.”
That is why consideration matters.
Before forcing celebration onto others, people must understand that these calendar events affect individuals differently. Compassion is needed for those whose memories are attached to pain rather than comfort. Some people are grieving parents they never truly had, even while those parents are still alive. Others are grieving parents who passed away before they ever experienced authentic love from them. Some are mourning childhoods that were stolen from them entirely.
The system profits heavily from emotional programming. Industries capitalize on guilt, obligation, loneliness, and emotional pressure during these holidays. Businesses make billions selling an image of perfect family life while many real families are fractured, traumatized, and silently suffering beneath the surface. The illusion is constantly marketed, while uncomfortable truths are buried.
A conscious society would create space for honesty instead of forcing emotional conformity. It would acknowledge both the beauty and the pain that exist within family structures. It would stop shaming survivors for speaking about abuse simply because the abuser carried the title of “mother” or “father.”
Real love is not manipulation.
Real parenting is not control.
Real protection is not fear.
Real care does not destroy a child’s spirit.
A true mother nurtures.
A true father protects.
A true parent creates safety, wisdom, guidance, compassion, and emotional security.
And for every person carrying invisible wounds during these heavily promoted system holidays, understand this clearly: your pain is real, your experiences matter, and you should never feel pressured to fake celebration for the comfort of a society that refuses to confront uncomfortable truths.
The world must stop idolizing titles while ignoring behavior. Character reveals truth far more than labels ever will.
To those carrying painful memories from what they endured at the hands of their parents, may healing find its way into your life. May you find the strength to rise beyond the pain, the wisdom to not let bitterness consume your spirit, and the peace to continue moving forward despite everything you survived. May you one day experience what true love, protection, care, safety, and genuine compassion truly feel like.
And for those who may one day become parents themselves, may you become the living example of the love you never received. May you break every evil cycle, every toxic pattern, every generational wound, and give your children the nurturing, patience, guidance, and unconditional love you deserved but never had. Sometimes the greatest form of healing is becoming the kind of parent, protector, and safe place that you once prayed for as a child.

Mother’s Day, let’s really look at it.


I will always put Truth at the forefront because that is where it belongs.
I have no value for this day. What I value is the truthful form of reasoning in actions, etc., through recognition of what a mother is, her duties as a mother, how she puts forth and manages her guardianship through motherhood, manages her home, children, situations, etc., and how she treats others and carries herself.
True mothers will carry a mother’s heart, and their overall aspects show who they really are and what they bring to the table, as the bible states, "You will know them by their fruits." They will be easy to identify, through them, of how they manage their home, and take care of themself and their family.
They are structured in the true alliance of guardianship through motherhood, a woman who understands the aspects of what a mother is and her duties to her family, and the loving authenticity, and with that for authenticity, there is no need for a programmed system structured push, of control that states what day and date an individual should show love, etc. to their loving mother, because it should always come naturally to do, and not just for one programmable day.
As I said, I have no value for this day, but I will continue to forever love, appreciate, and show the greatest gratitude and respect to all mothers who carry the true authenticity and worth of a mother, the true guardianship of which their hearts and workmanship uphold.
Mother’s Day is a day like all other days that has been programmed and structured by a system through deceptive and controlling motives, merchandising, and profit.
Now, let’s really get into the true concept of what Mother’s Day is. Let’s examine the highs and lows of what is truly happening and who is being left out of these false, manufactured, and materialistic ways of this promoted event called Mother’s Day.
For me, Mother’s Day marks the day I first became a mother, and that automatically placed me within the structure of motherhood and being called “mother.”
This system-programmed and structured day called Mother’s Day, I do not see any true benefit in it other than the hype of high-volume merchandising, materialistic fabrication, and people being gullible enough to be easily programmed into accepting an event that is constantly pushed at them.
It is fully based on merchandising, not the authentic, true value of Love in its purest and truest form.
Don’t get me wrong, I know there are individuals out there who continue to show love to their mothers and value parenthood overall, and within the societies we all live in, they will naturally jump at the occasion to do more for their mothers.
This day, called Mother’s Day, only brings a day of identifiable logic where families gather together, share gifts, and show gratitude to their mothers through a system-programmed and structured event that is pushed onto society.
My question is this: why just one day? Why wait for a programmable day to shower a mother, your mother, with gifts, favors, benefits, group dinners, and material gestures? If a mother, your mother, is supposed to be the true female structure and guardian of the family base unit, then she should be recognized, cherished, loved, and appreciated every day. Natural gestures of appreciation should always come from you naturally, as it should always be an ongoing thing to recognize your mother as a beloved mother.
Now let’s talk about the mothers who, for some reason, have not had the privilege to be part of this programable day, the real and true mothers who, through sweat, sacrifice, and energy, have worked effortlessly throughout their lives to make their children comfortable and safe. Mothers who have been locked behind mental institutions because of betrayal, stress, hardships, systems, and people who turned against them.
Let’s talk about the true mothers who, to this day, have been neglected in hospitals and institutions, neglected by family members who no longer see them as the once-loving, hardworking mothers who worked tirelessly to keep them safe, alive, and comfortable, but now see them as burdens to the family.
Let’s talk about those mothers who have been left out and are now called burdens to society and to a government system that has no place or space for them.
I’m not ignorant of the fact that all mothers are not the same, and I do know that, because of mental fatigue, trauma, and personal issues, some individuals may not be able to function properly within family structures and may bring more harm to themselves and others than good. I am aware of that, and I know that some mothers are institutionalized to receive the help they need.
My focus is on the women who are worthy to be called mothers, the ones who endlessly look out for, manage, and take care of their families, yet now find themselves rejected, neglected, and pushed aside. Mothers who continue to be used and abused. Mothers who once protected their families but have now become prey to the very same families they once protected.
It is no secret what is going on within societies around the world; women who were once known as true mothers and guardians to their children are ending up receiving the worst treatment imaginable from those same children and family members.
We can also truthfully say that not every woman should be allowed to be called a mother if she does not have the true-hearted guardianship, function, and understanding of what a mother should be.
And not every daughter or son can truly be called a child if they have not positioned themselves to deserve such a title.
And because of evil situations that have taken form through some women against their children, those women can no longer be called mothers, because not every woman deserves to be called such.
A mother can be any woman, but it is the loving and genuine heart within her that makes the process of guardianship complete.
If a loving and true heart is not within the guardianship, then it is simply a woman giving birth to a child without a true love connection.
True mothers should be appreciated every day, not just on a system-programmed and structured day. Women should be called mothers. After all, they deserve it because they are truthful to the cause and guardianship of motherhood, and because of this, they are worthy to be called “Mother.”
So don’t just wait for a system-structured programmable day that pushes you to show materialistic love to your mother. Genuinely appreciate and love your mother always, endlessly, and forever.
Don’t get pushed to perform; do it authentically.


 

Monday, 4 May 2026

The Dangerous Illusion of Wealth — When Riches Can Sometimes Hide Rot


There’s a truth many people don’t want to face, because it shatters the fantasy they’ve been quietly chasing:
Psalm 37:16 declares it plainly, “A little that a righteous man hath is better than the riches of many wicked.”
That isn’t poetry. That’s a warning.
We live in a world obsessed with appearance. Flashy lifestyles, designer labels, luxury cars, curated perfection. People scroll, compare, and envy, silently measuring their worth against what others display. But what you’re looking at is often a polished mask, not the raw truth.
Because wealth, for some, is not built on integrity, it’s built on compromise.
Let’s speak plainly.
Some individuals didn’t just “work hard” for what they have. Some stepped over morals. Some betrayed trust. Some sold pieces of their dignity. Some engage in lewd, corrupt, or destructive acts behind closed doors just to secure status, money, and power. And then they step into the light, dressed in success, admired by people who have no idea what it cost.
That’s the deception.
You’re envying a highlight reel without seeing the hidden darkness that funds it.
In those cases, money becomes more than just currency; it becomes camouflage. It hides wrongdoing. It distracts the public. It creates an illusion of success while burying the truth underneath layers of image and influence.
And here’s where many go wrong: they start believing that any wealth is worth having.
It’s not.
Because what good is abundance if it comes at the cost of your soul, your peace, your integrity? What good is luxury if it’s sustained by actions that eat away at your humanity?
A righteous life, even if it looks small to the world, carries something wealth can never buy clarity, peace, self-respect, and freedom from hidden guilt.
A person who can sleep at night without secrets clawing at their conscience is richer than someone surrounded by luxury but haunted by the means by which they acquired it.
So no, don’t envy what you see.
You don’t know the sacrifices people made.
You don’t know the lines they crossed.
You don’t know the weight they carry behind closed doors.
What you see on the surface is often a carefully constructed illusion. And most of the time, things are not what they seem.
Real wealth isn’t loud. It doesn’t beg for attention. It doesn’t need validation.
It stands quietly in truth.
So, if what you have is honest, if it’s clean, if it allows you to look in the mirror without flinching, then understand this clearly:
You are not lacking.
You are ahead.
Power and money don’t purify character; they amplify it. History has already exposed how some elites, across celebrity circles, corporate empires, and even governments, have used wealth to fund exploitation, silence victims, manipulate systems, and indulge destructive appetites behind closed doors. Just look at cases like the Jeffreys’ and the Harveys' case, not as isolated incidents, but as proof that influence can be weaponized to conceal wrongdoing for years, and many more could be out there doing the same things or worse. This isn’t about condemning all wealth; it’s about recognizing that money can be used as a shield for evil when integrity is absent.


 

Sunday, 3 May 2026

The Loneliest Place That Anyone Could Ever Find Themselves Is In A Place Of Not Being Comfortable In Their Own Skin


There is a silence that doesn’t come from being alone.
There is a void that doesn’t come from an empty room.
The loneliest place anyone could ever find themselves is with a body they don’t appreciate.
You can be surrounded by people, laughter, attention, validation, and still feel completely disconnected. Because when you are not comfortable in your own skin, nothing external can anchor you. No relationship can stabilize you. No praise can satisfy you. No crowd can cure that internal exile.
Let’s speak truth without dressing it up:
If you are not comfortable with yourself, you are not truly comfortable with others.
What you present becomes performance.
What you express becomes filtered.
What you give becomes calculated.
There will always be a layer of deception, not necessarily malicious, but real. Because you are forced to act like someone who is at ease, when internally, you are not. That disconnect leaks into everything, your relationships, your decisions, your energy.
People can feel it, even if they can’t explain it.
And here’s the truth many avoid because it cuts deep:
If you don’t love yourself, you are not capable of fully loving others.
Not surface-level affection. Not attachment. Not dependency disguised as love. Real love—steady, grounded, honest, and whole- cannot flow from a place that is empty, confused, or at war with itself.
Because love is not something you perform.
Love is something you embody.
And embodiment starts with you.
It starts with how you speak to yourself when no one is around.
It starts with whether you accept yourself without constantly trying to escape yourself.
It starts with whether you trust your own voice or silence it to fit into expectations.
Trust enters the conversation here, and most people overlook it.
You cannot build trust with others if you don’t trust yourself.
You cannot expect honesty if you are living in internal dishonesty.
Because at the root of it all is this:
Are you being truthful with yourself?
Not inflated with ego. Not masked in false confidence. Not hiding behind pride.
Real self-love is not loud. It is not arrogant. It is not performative.
It is quiet, grounded, and deeply aware.
It is the ability to:
  • Know yourself without flinching.
  • Understand your patterns without denying them.
  • Care for yourself without abandoning your growth.
  • Appreciate who you are without needing constant validation.
  • Be grateful for your existence without comparison.
  • Trust your own mind, heart, and direction.
If you cannot do that, if you cannot sit with yourself without discomfort, without distraction, without needing to escape, then you are not free. You are surviving inside a version of yourself that isn’t fully real.
And that is where the deception lives.
Not just to others, but to yourself.
Living a life where you cannot be your true self is not living; it’s maintaining an illusion. And illusions demand constant energy to uphold. That’s why it feels exhausting. That’s why it feels hollow.
But here’s the shift most people avoid because it requires responsibility:
You are not stuck there.
Comfort in your own skin is not something you’re born with or without; it’s something you build through honesty, accountability, and self-respect.
You build it by facing yourself instead of avoiding yourself.
You build it by correcting yourself instead of lying to yourself.
You build it by choosing truth over comfort.
Because the moment you become real with yourself, truly real, you start reclaiming your space internally. And once you own that space, everything changes.
Your relationships become more genuine.
Your presence becomes more grounded.
Your energy becomes more aligned.
You stop performing. You start existing.
And that loneliness?
It dissolves, not because people suddenly fill your life, but because you finally show up for yourself.
There is no deeper connection than being at home within who you are.
And until that happens, nothing outside of you will ever feel like enough.


 

A Nation Slowly Crumbling in Plain Sight


There’s a dangerous kind of decay that doesn’t scream for attention. It doesn’t explode overnight. It settles in quietly, spreads gradually, and before long, it becomes normal. That’s exactly what’s happening.
Look around, really look.
Poles leaning like they’ve given up. Some of them rot from the inside out, collapsing without warning. Roads riddled with potholes so deep they feel like open wounds in the earth. Not small cracks, these are craters that damage vehicles, disrupt livelihoods, and quietly drain the pockets of ordinary people who have to repair what neglect has broken.
Manholes? Some are sunken, some are inverted, some are outright dangerous. Drain covers are missing or shattered. Bridges with walkways that are literally falling apart, wooden panels eroded, unstable, and unsafe. Wells left uncovered, sitting there like silent traps waiting for a disaster.
And this isn’t hidden. This is not some secret buried in reports or statistics. This is daily life.
Many communities are left in the dark, literally. Streets without proper lighting, overgrown bushes swallowing sidewalks and trails, and light poles standing useless or failing altogether.
Public services, places that are supposed to serve the people, feel like afterthoughts. People standing for hours in the heat or rain because there’s no proper seating. Buildings that smell like neglect, mold creeping along walls, dirty air conditioning units circulating stale air, and broken equipment that never gets fixed. Windows cracked, doors hanging, surfaces unclean. These are not minor issues. These are signs of a system that has stopped respecting the people it serves.
And here’s the real truth: the neglect has become so widespread, so constant, that people are starting not to notice it anymore. That’s the most dangerous stage, when dysfunction becomes normal.
Let’s talk about the illusion of action.
A pothole patching machine gets showcased. The camera rolls. Promises are made. It looks good for a moment. But then what? Where is the follow-through? Because the reality on the ground tells a different story. The same potholes remain, and new ones multiply. That wasn’t a solution. That was a performance.
Barbados is not a massive country where oversight can be excused by scale. This is a small nation. Small enough for things to be managed. Small enough for accountability to be real. So when neglect reaches this level, it’s not because it’s impossible to fix, it’s because it’s not being prioritized.
And then comes the uncomfortable contrast.
Go to the areas where wealth lives, where investors, corporations, and the well-connected operate. Suddenly, the roads are smoother. The surroundings are maintained. The infrastructure works. It’s clean. It’s orderly. It’s functional.
Then step back into the spaces where the majority of people live.
The difference is undeniable.
It feels like two different countries are being run side by side. One polished, maintained, and protected. The other was overlooked, worn down, and left to deteriorate. One receives attention. The other receives excuses.
That’s not development. That’s division.
No nation can claim progress while its foundation is crumbling. Infrastructure is not a luxury; it’s the backbone of daily life. Roads, public buildings, utilities, these are the basic responsibilities of governance. When they fail, everything else begins to collapse with them.
This isn’t just about inconvenience. It’s about dignity.
People should not have to navigate danger just to get to work. They should not have to stand in discomfort to access basic services. They should not have to accept filth, decay, and dysfunction as the standard.
Barbados is too small for this level of neglect. Too visible. Too capable. Too full of people who know what better looks like.
And that’s the part that can’t be ignored, people know.
They see it. They experience it. They talk about it. But awareness without pressure changes nothing. Silence is what allows neglect to settle in and take root.
A nation doesn’t fall apart overnight. It erodes piece by piece, decision by decision, delay by delay.
What you’re seeing now isn’t random. It’s the result of prolonged inaction.
And if nothing shifts, if accountability remains weak, if priorities stay misplaced, then what you’re witnessing today is only the beginning of something deeper.
Because neglect, once it becomes normalized, doesn’t stop on its own.
It spreads.
What’s being presented to the world is a polished fraction, not the full reality. Some people live in it every day and know what is really happening behind the scenes, because the truth isn’t in the showcase, it’s in what’s being ignored.
The real Barbados needs to step forward because what is deceptively being showcased isn't the full view.


 

When the Beach seems to be no Longer Ours


There was a time when the beach in Barbados didn’t need permission.
You didn’t have to think twice. You didn’t have to look over your shoulder. You didn’t have to squeeze through some narrow corridor like you’re sneaking into something forbidden. The beach was life. A few steps off the road and you were there, feet in sand, salt in the air, laughter echoing across the shoreline. It belonged to everyone, and everyone felt that to be true.
Now? That feeling is being stripped away piece by piece.
What used to be open access has turned into controlled entry. What used to feel like freedom now feels like an intrusion. Walls are going up. Pathways are shrinking. Familiar routes are being blocked, redirected, or quietly erased. And the worst part? It’s happening in plain sight, dressed up as “development.”
Let’s call it what it is.
When investors come in, buying up coastal land and building massive hotels and private resorts, they aren’t just constructing buildings; they’re redrawing boundaries. Not always legally on paper, but physically and psychologically. Because yes, the law may still say beaches are public. But try walking through some of these areas today and tell me if it feels public.
It feels like trespassing.
It feels like you’re being watched.
It feels like you don’t belong.
And that’s the shift that people need to wake up to.
This isn’t just about access. This is about identity. This is about people being slowly disconnected from the very land that raised them. Generations grew up with the beach as a natural extension of home, a place for family gatherings, reflection, culture, and community. Now that the connection is being filtered through private interests and profit margins.
Why?
Because beachfront land is money. Big money.
Tourism is being prioritized at a level where the local experience is becoming secondary. Governments sign off on large-scale developments because they promise economic growth, foreign exchange, and global attention. On paper, it appears to be progress. But on the ground, it often looks like displacement, quiet, gradual, and easy to ignore if you’re not paying attention.
And let’s be real, this isn’t just about hotels.
It’s about control.
Control of space.
Control of access.
Control of who gets to enjoy what used to be free.
Because when pathways are hidden, narrowed, or surrounded by towering walls, the message becomes clear without needing to be spoken: this is no longer for you in the way it used to be.
That carefree walk from the road to the sea? Replaced by a calculated route.
That open, welcoming coastline? Now segmented and shadowed by private structures.
That feeling of belonging? Slowly being replaced with hesitation.
And here’s the uncomfortable truth: this doesn’t happen without approval.
Decisions are being made at levels where profit outweighs public experience. Where the long-term cultural and social impact is brushed aside for short-term economic gain. Where the people, the very heartbeat of the island, are expected to adjust, accept, and move aside.
But the question that needs to be asked is simple:
At what point does development become erasure?
Because when the people who grew up walking those beaches start feeling like outsiders, something has gone fundamentally wrong.
This is not about rejecting growth. This is about demanding balance. This is about ensuring that development does not come at the cost of identity, access, and dignity. Because once those are gone, no amount of luxury resorts can replace what was lost.
The beach was never just sand and sea.
It was freedom.
It was culture.
It belonged.
And if that’s being taken, even subtly, then it’s not just the coastline that’s changing.
It’s the soul of the island itself.