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Panic spreads quietly at first, like a thin mist settling over familiar landscapes. People feel it in small ways at first—a hesitation in conversation, a subtle mistrust of the news, the sense that something once reliable is slipping away. Then, almost without warning, the illusion of stability shatters. Political systems, long assumed to be resilient, fracture under pressure; economies that once promised security strain and wobble; and the narratives we relied on to make sense of the world no longer hold. In this maelstrom, individuals and communities experience what could only be described as spiritual whiplash, a sudden disorientation where old certainties vanish. And in that disoriented space, millions quietly—or sometimes desperately—ask the same forbidden question: did Edgar Cayce foresee this unraveling of the modern age?
Edgar Cayce’s writings, compiled from decades of trance readings, have always lingered at the edge of mainstream consciousness, a curious blend of mysticism and prescience. What draws people back to him now is not merely idle curiosity about prophecy, but a profound, almost urgent desire for coherence in a world that feels spiritually unmoored. His readings often described cycles of upheaval, periods when institutions, once noble in purpose, would crumble because they had drifted too far from their original mission: serving human dignity, moral integrity, and the cultivation of spiritual growth. To contemporary observers, these warnings ring uncomfortably true. Corporate conglomerates, governmental agencies, and cultural touchstones all appear at risk, not merely because of external threats, but because they have lost sight of the deeper ethical foundations that once justified their existence.
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