Violence in public spaces is generally understood as an issue of order, supervision, or law enforcement. This perspective has its place, yet it does not fully address what underlies it. At a deeper level, this phenomenon does not stand alone, but reflects what appears on the surface of human behavior as a result of inner conditions. When self-alignment is not present, inner clarity is not maintained, and public spaces become a place where unregulated impulses find their outlet.
From the perspective of self-alignment, what appears outwardly as actions is often rooted in inner conditions. When the self is not aligned, the ability to recognize boundaries, direction, and one’s position becomes incomplete, leading to responses that are reactive and unmeasured. In such conditions, unrecognized pressures can shift into expressions that are not aligned with what should be lived.
Ultimately, sustainable order does not rely solely on external systems, but on the inner state that underlies them. From self-alignment, inner clarity emerges, and from that clarity, actions find their direction. In this state, shared spaces are no longer outlets for release, but become spaces that are more calm, grounded, and sustainable.
Human REALsource (HRs)
Your Self-Alignment Guide