Wednesday, March 4, 2026

THE PRIEST, THE GENERAL , THE CEO
THREE COSTUMES ONE RITUAL
Your willingness to die for their agenda is the most valuable thing they will ever own.🩸🔥🩸🔥🩸🔥
The short version...Humanity has been bleeding for gods, institutions, corporations, and causes since the beginning of time. That ancient sacrifice reflex is still being weaponized against you today. It is time to put down every blade that was never yours to carry and become the life you kept offering to someone else’s altar. If that lands and you want to go deeper, read on...
Before language. Before fire. Before we had a syllable for the divine, we were already cutting something open on an altar and watching the life drain out of it in the name of something larger than ourselves.
This is not ancient history. This is the root system still running beneath everything you think, everything your nervous system automatically obeys, every institution that has ever told you what to give your life force to and why.
Almost no one is looking at it directly. Almost no one has the stomach to.
Let’s do it together.
Go back to the Aztecs. Not the museum version.
Four priests would hold a man across a stone slab while a fifth opened his chest with an obsidian blade, reached through the diaphragm, and tore out the still-beating heart. The body thrown down the pyramid steps.
At the re-consecration of the Great Pyramid in 1487, accounts claim approximately 80,000 prisoners sacrificed over four days.
Entire wars organized not for territory but for harvest. Children sacrificed to the rain god Tlaloc, because their tears were believed to call rain from the sky. Small children. Weeping on a stone altar. To make the gods weep with them.
Cross to Carthage. Overwhelming archaeological evidence confirms that Carthaginian parents ritually sacrificed their own infants as offerings to their gods, with ancient accounts describing a bronze statue with heated arms and musicians playing to drown out the cries. Your own newborn, offered to fire, because you vowed that if the gods brought your trade shipment safely to port, you would give them your next child. Commerce and infanticide, transactionally bound.
The Inca performed child sacrifice in a ritual called qhapaq hucha. Their frozen mummified bodies have been recovered from Andean mountaintops thousands of years later. Some killed by blows to the skull. Others given an intoxicating drink, carried to altitude, and left to lose consciousness slowly in the dark, dying of cold. Well-dressed. Well-fed. Chosen. Honored. Left to freeze alone at the top of the world.
Every civilization. Every era. Every continent. The same ancient equation…power requires tribute, and the most potent currency has always been a life.
Now come to Abraham.
A man described as righteous, graced, walking with God. Strolling casually with his son Isaac. And because a voice commands him, he throws his son across a rock, ties his wrists, and brings a blade to his throat. An angel stops him at the last second. God is satisfied. Obedience proven.
And we read this story and call it faith.
What nobody wants to sit with is Isaac. The shattering in that boy’s body. His father, his safe person, his entire ground of being, drawing a blade across his horizon.
Bring it to today. If any parent told authorities that a divine voice commanded them to hold their child down and bring a blade to their throat, we would do exactly what we should..remove that child immediately, name it a dangerous psychotic break, treat it as a mental health emergency of the highest order.
And yet this is the foundational story handed to children for thousands of years as the gold standard of holy devotion.
We metabolize it. Spiritualize it. Run it through the theological filter until it comes out looking like wisdom about surrender and trust. What we almost never do is stay with the human being on the altar. Feel what happens in a child when the most trusted person in the world reveals that their devotion to an invisible voice supersedes their love for you.
That is not faith. That is trauma dressed in scripture. And we built Western civilization on top of it without ever looking down.
The Old Testament alone is soaked in animal blood, God requiring rivers of it to stay appeased. Then the traditions of self-flagellation in the Philippines, devotees driving actual nails through their own palms on Good Friday, barbed wire across bare skin, reenacting the crucifixion in their own flesh.
Santeria. Voodoo. Every tradition carries its version. Underneath all of it, the same original logic..something invisible and powerful is angry and demands tribute, and blood is the currency it understands.
The names change. The geography changes. The gods change. The bleeding never stops.
Here is the raw truth of where that logic was born.
Before theology gave it sacred meaning, it was just survival. You killed so you could eat. When you began to sense that some invisible force governed the rain and the harvest and the plague, you applied the only psychology your nervous system knew…appease the powerful before the powerful consumes you. To gain their favour and mercy.
You fed your warlord. You fed your king. You fed your god the same way. Naturally. Inevitably.
That reflex is in your cells right now. No matter how much meditation, how many plant medicine journeys, how much awakening you have moved through.
The bloodthirst for sacrifice lives in the oldest layer of your animal body. Pre-rational, pre-verbal, pre-spiritual. It predates every belief system that ever tried to dress it in meaning.
And that primal layer is being reached into and pulled every single day by those who understand exactly how it works.
Core dissatisfaction with life, the ache of purposelessness, the unnamed hunger for belonging, draws people toward movements that stir up those primal instincts. To save. To protect. To kill.
Including themselves. When those movements enshrine martyrdom as the highest expression of devotion, we enter genuinely dangerous terrain. The unprocessed wound in us that still aches for a parent to finally show up evokes extreme loyalties that can lead straight to oblivion.
Afterlife salvation narratives exploit our deepest terror, that we will be excluded from something that lasts beyond death.
This is cultic sacrifice. The grand ante-up. God did it for you. Now what will you do for God? That unheld inner child still scanning the horizon for rescue is the precise vulnerability every sacrificial system in history has known how to exploit.
The priests who called for the sacrificed goats also happened to receive the sacrificed goats as payment, because they alone knew how to commune with God. Look at it clearly. Not with cynicism.
With open eyes.
Now look at war.
Honor the genuine heroism of soldiers who faced real threat and gave everything to protect people they loved. That nobility is real and deserves every ounce of reverence we can give it.
But here is what almost never gets said at the memorial service.
The same noble impulse, that deep cellular drive to protect, to serve, to give yourself to something larger than yourself, is precisely what makes young men and women so exploitable.
The sacrificial urge is real. The cause it gets pointed at often is not. States have always known how to reach into that sacred instinct and redirect it toward geopolitical power games, resource extraction, and the profit margins of weapons manufacturers who never set foot on a battlefield. The soldier believes he is defending his people. And that belief is genuine, and it is beautiful, and it is being used against him. His noble willingness to die is the raw material that empire has always run on.
Certain wars were abandoned the moment warriors in the field discovered their cause was not defense of the innocent but a manipulation engineered by those who had everything to gain and nothing to lose.
The military industrial complex needs blood to keep its gears turning. Wrap it in flags. Sanctify it with ceremony. Make the young believe that bleeding for invisible agendas constructed in boardrooms and back channels is the highest expression of love for their country.
The sacrifice is real. The reason they were told they were making it rarely is.
Then the pattern migrates into what looks nothing like war.
The corporation calls on your sacrifice. Grind yourself down. Prove loyalty through attrition. Let the body accumulate stress until it speaks in symptoms.
Even parenting gets hijacked..perform total self-annihilation in the name of love, stay away from your children the majority of waking hours to pay for the childcare raising them in your absence, call it providing, work harder to compensate.
What are we actually feeding?
When we encounter these ancient sacrifice stories, our spiritual instinct is to reach for meaning. To metaphorize. To extract a deeper teaching from the horror.
We spiritualize the gore until it becomes palatable, even beautiful. But what if that very move is itself another form of the same avoidance? The esoteric interpretations feel wholesome, but ask yourself honestly…do those deeper meanings arise from the original text, or from your own inherent goodness, your own heart already oriented toward love before you ever encountered the story?
You brought your own wisdom to the material and transformed it. The light was yours. Not the altar’s.
And nowhere is this distortion more worth examining than in Christianity itself.
The most radical thing Jesus ever did was not die. It was love without condition while alive. He did not audit worthiness before healing. He touched lepers. He ate with prostitutes and tax collectors. He looked at the ones society had already discarded and said…you are seen, you are whole, you belong. That was the transmission. That was the earthquake.
The unconditional nature of that love was so threatening to the establishment that they killed him for it. His death was the consequence of how radically he lived, not the point of why he came.
The distortion crept in when the institution made the execution the product. When the cross became the logo instead of the embrace. When “he died for you” buried “he loved you, fully, exactly as you are, right now, no payment required.” That shift redirected an entire civilization away from the living transmission and back into the oldest blood cult logic…the god must be paid, someone must bleed, and you must carry that debt as the foundation of your relationship with the divine.
The teaching was never about the altar. It was always about the love that made the altar unnecessary.
This is what transcending sacrifice actually looks like.
No leader, no clergy, no movement can reach into your unparented wound and conscript you into their agenda.
You are genuinely your own adult. You trust your own direction. You hear your own soul’s voice without needing it ratified by a tradition or a charismatic figure standing between you and the sacred.
Once you arrive here, the entire concept of sacrifice begins to dissolve. Setting aside temporary pleasures to build something substantial is not sacrifice. It is a sacred calling, freely chosen from wholeness rather than extracted by guilt and the ancient animal panic of divine abandonment.
The parent awake at 3am beside a fevered child. The healer who carries her patients home inside her chest. The teacher who stays after the bell. These are not sacrifices. They are the sacred privilege and devotion of a life oriented toward love.
The word sacrifice contains within it the word sacred. Sacer. To make holy. The original meaning was never destruction. It was consecration. And the only altar truly worthy of that act is the full, undefended, clear-eyed presence of a human being who has stopped bleeding for the wrong reasons and started building for the right ones.
You do not have to sacrifice your life for anything.
You are here to become it.
Rather than sacrifice life, you become Life. Love. Freedom.
That is just the truth of what you already are, the moment you put down every blade that was never yours to carry.
Drop your reflection below. Where have you been bleeding for the wrong altar? And are you finally ready to put the knife of sacrifice down?​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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