How to Radically Embrace Meaning Even When Secular Materialism is in the Water
Stop submitting to a worldview that leaves you spiritually paralyzed.

Do you know the easiest way to control a population?
Tell them life is meaningless and random. Get them to believe we are headed pointlessly toward chaos and destruction.
The narrative goes something like this: humanity entered planet earth pointlessly, and it will destroy it pointlessly. Your body is a ticking time bomb. At any moment, you could awaken with a lump on your neck, and your “only option” will be to “fight” a war against your body.
The free-floating notion that we’re condemned to meaninglessness or a sudden onslaught of brutish random suffering is a convenient fiction that keeps the populace desperate for outside authority.
Why? A fearful population without a backbone of meaning is a population that is easy to control.
The solution lies in radically embracing your power to author your own fate. You do this by trusting that every experience, no matter how small, is meaningful, influences the cosmos, and serves as an invitation to higher levels of self-understanding and reunion.
“Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” — Viktor Frankl
Pointlessness is a seductive but dead weight
The term secular materialism refers to the reductionist attitude that says only that which is objectively measurable and definable can be understood to be real.
From this perspective, the world consists of resources to be exploited. I call it the Cult of Pointlessness because it leads people to act as if the earth is dead and mute, and experiences are random accidents of circumstances.
Alan Watts conveys this perspective in Does It Matter? Essays on Man’s Relation to Materiality:
“According to this view, the universe is a mindless mechanism and man a sort of accidental microorganism infesting a minute globular rock that revolves about an unimportant star on the outer fringe of one of the minor galaxies.”

This mechanistic standpoint serves global systems, such as pharmaceutical medicine. If people believe life and death and suffering happens mechanistically or as consequences of random luck, they believe they have no choice but to accept the closest available solutions.
From this standpoint, people unquestionably accept impersonal and un-nuanced quick fixes for their problems.
One sacrament of the Cult of Pointlessness is the medicalization of psychological struggle. If you’re feeling anxiety or sadness, it has become taboo to consider that maybe these emotions are trustworthy and indicators of an imbalanced or misaligned life.
But the Cult of Pointlessness says oh no no no honey, the problem is chemical. (In other words, the problem is YOU and your faulty, tricky, neurotransmitters!) You’re suffering with a one-dimensional, chemical problem, so you should fix it with a chemical solution, and carry on life as you ordinarily would.
After all, if there’s a technological fix, why suffer? Why engage in the hard work of transforming your life?
Repeat after me: our bodies and brains are error-prone, life is chaotic and pointless, and our precious egos are helpless against a big, bad world.
All we can do is cling to Expert opinion, “fight” or “manage” our symptoms and try to stay alive until death works its teeth into the flawed, error-prone meat sacks we call bodies. In the grip of this narrative, we’ll accept anything if it will end our suffering.
Why you should plunge the God-shaped hole in your life
Members of the Cult of Pointlessness mistake spirituality as a pursuit for bedtime stories that provide comfort in a bleak world.
But the Cult of Pointlessness tends to just replace God with the brutality and randomness of nature, a perspective showcased in the materialist’s favorite mantra: “life is nasty, brutish, and short.”
In this way, both perspectives urge people to take a passive stance where they’re either directed by the will of a god or by the impersonal brutality of a world out of their control.
We can trace back a great deal of this confusion from our collective turn away from religious principles and toward a mechanical view of reality.
In the 19th century, Nietzsche wrote about the death of God, a sign of the lost role of religion in Western culture. He predicted this death would be the source of collective turmoil because so much of our way of thinking contains religious elements we’re not fully conscious of.
Though he saw this death as holding a degree of opportunity, he also saw the potential for a descent into chaos. Religion was an anchor and source of guidance for thousands of years. Without it, people would struggle to be their own anchors.
Psychoanalyst Carl Jung agreed: that we don’t thrive as our own anchors or moral directors because we don’t know ourselves as well as we think we do. Most people only identify with a fraction of their entire psyche, their ego.
But the psyche consists of both our personal and collective unconscious. Myths and religious frameworks help us build bridges between the conscious and unconscious minds, which can serve to liberate us from self-sabotage, confusion, and nihilism.
Thomas Jefferson said, “If God weren’t real, it would be necessary to invent him.” On this note, many have pointed out the adaptive functions of traditional religion; namely, you follow some of its guidelines, you can promote your chances of survival (for instance, “don’t lie,” can minimize susceptibility to betrayal or needless complexity relationships).
If we see religion as having adaptive qualities, it would make sense that spiritual inclinations are a feature, not a bug, of the human psyche.
So, if there’s a god-shaped hole in the collective, when the bearded, heavenly father leaves the scene, something else will take its place. That something is materialist science.
Instead of an afterlife, cult members enjoy the promise of “early detection,” freezing their bodies until medical technology can swoop in and “manage” their aging, and a lucky few can even merge with artificial intelligence.
In both cases, the heavenly or white-coated, professional father protects people against their greatest fear: Mortality! Pain! The big, scary grim reaper.
The problem is though many people have the trappings of adulthood figured out, very few are psychologically whole enough to see death and suffering as inevitable parts of life to be embraced and loved, not feared.
When a population has no framework for embracing or understanding death, they will do anything to avoid suffering.
‘Follow the science’ is the new ‘listen to your parents.’ — Naval Ravikant
The dominant systems in culture benefit when most of the population remains in a child-like, paralyzed state.
What does this look like? Let’s see:
- Believing that if you haven’t received official training in health, you have no business researching your symptoms and finding the solution on your own.
- Seeing pain as an annoyance to suppress and fear, not as an initiation into a radical embrace of how things are, at this moment, no matter how much your ego wants to rail against their wicked, insufferable wrongness.
These perspectives sure are wonderful for pharmaceutical and insurance companies who profit when you talk to your doctor about some new, fast-acting solution that will help you manage your situation.
Re-contextualize fear & integrate
There are two fundamental ways out of the fear-centric trap we find ourselves in as a culture. The first involves embracing the psycho-spirituality of health.
This means recognizing that our health destinies aren’t rooted in luck or genetics alone, but in the complex interactions between our environment, diets, and belief systems.
The second invites us to unite the conscious and the unconscious minds so that we no longer feel run by scary forces outside our control. Instead, we can recognize how we create our own joy and our suffering.
The psycho-spirituality of health
Because of the reductionist attitudes in our culture, people tend to see their bodily health as fundamentally separate from their emotional health.
Yet for several decades, the field of psychoneuroimmunology (PNI) has disrupted long-standing dualistic notions that our brains exist in a vacuum apart from the mind, emotions, and environment.
The mother of PNI, Dr. Candace Pert, wrote Molecules of Emotion: The Science Behind Mind-Body Medicine, which details the bidirectional relationship between the brain, the immune, endocrine, and peripheral and central nervous systems.
These systems, once thought to be separate, engage in constant back-and-forth communication. In this way, when a stimulus affects one system, it propagates throughout the body to influence the others. This explains the interdependent relationship between the way we feel and what we’re doing with our bodies.
PNI reveals the medication-driven response to symptoms as one-dimensional. When you medicate a problem, you’re typically only addressing a single, surface-level aspect of it. You run the risk of creating downstream, unintended consequences because you’re interfering with a complex network of interconnected responses.
Conversely, when you see disturbances as signals that something is out of balance, you can take steps to regain equilibrium, whether it be in terms of diet (avoiding foods that spike your blood sugar, induce cortisol releases, or irritate your gut), environmental exposures (mold, endocrine-disrupting chemicals in your home), or toxic beliefs.
“When symptoms emerge, they are meant to be beacons; we are wired to respond to those symptoms, which are our inborn, natural re-calibration system for when things go wrong.” Kelly Brogan
Health issues aren’t simply mechanical: they’re biochemical, metabolic, and psycho-spiritual. The Western medical approach of manipulating or suppressing symptoms with medication represents the domination of the body. And it often just causes symptoms to manifest differently.
For more on the psycho-spirituality of health, read these books:
- Own Yourself by Kelly Brogan
- The Gene Keys by Richard Rudd
- You Are the Placebo: Making Your Mind Matter by Joe Dispenza
- When the Body Says No by Gabor Maté
On the healing powers of shadow work
Most emotional struggles come from an assumption of powerlessness. We believe that our money, health, or relationship issues are signs of our having made mistakes or signals of our deep inadequacy.
But what if our circumstances, as painful as they can be, represent the fulfillment of our repressed desires?
Many psychologists have noticed that humans have a habit of unconsciously enjoying their suffering.
For Jung, the repressed parts of our psyche we attempt to distance ourselves from are represented by what he called the shadow, the parts of ourselves we deny, repress, and consciously experience as shameful and wrong.
While our conscious minds experience these patterns as painful and unwanted, they unconsciously serve as payoffs to dearly held beliefs we hold about ourselves and our lives.
Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will rule your life, and you will call it fate. — Carl Jung
In the life-altering book, Existential Kink: Unmask Your Shadow and Embrace Your Power, Dr. Carolyn Elliott suggests that as long as we repress our secret enjoyment of our painful, frustrating circumstances, the patterns will repeat. We’ll experience ourselves as hopeless, put-upon egos destined to be tortured by a cruel, seemingly out of our control fate.
The answer to this problem is to unify the conscious and the unconscious minds, and I hope you’ll read the book (Existential Kink) for a variety of tools and frameworks to help you do so.
The punchline of shadow integration is this: everything you experience is meaningful and serves a function in the narrative universe that is your life.
You don’t struggle with relationships or finances because you’re simply illegitimate or hopeless: you experience these struggles because you’re getting something out of them, whether it be the satisfaction of unconscious prohibitions against experiencing abundance or the payoff of long-held beliefs about human nature.
One way to excavate the meaning in your circumstances is to use divination tools, such as the I Ching. When you consult a system such as this, your interpretation of the insights it offers helps to excavate the unconscious beliefs that animate your asking of the question.
Recognizing the unconscious underbelly of your question allows you to connect dots you might not have had conscious access to. Integrating this information can give you insight into the sources of your inert, stuck points, fears, creative blocks, and even your secret love for what feels like an indicting problem. ;)
This is just one example of the many ways you can unite your conscious and unconscious minds for a much higher level of personal clarity.
Bridging the gap between your conscious and unconscious minds can not only dissolve blocks, but in doing so, it frees energy so you gain the resolve to do the meaningful things you want to do but usually feel torn about or otherwise incapable of doing.
When you integrate your shadow or explore the psycho-spiritual significance of your bodily experience, you’re trading illusions of random, chaotic pointlessness for faith in a design beyond your conscious vantage point.
This doesn’t require belief in anything: but it does invite you to ask whether reality is much more nuanced and open for first-person experimentation than the scientistic Cult of Pointlessness would like you to assume.
The truth is this: we don’t need to have all the answers to recognize that the materialist worldview doesn’t serve most people.
If you expose yourself to news or mass media, you’ll notice that the narratives spewing from the crisis-mongering, materialistic worldview tend to evoke specific patterns of response — Fear! Urgency! Warnings that the apocalypse is here and the way through involves control, management, and hiding away from the scary stuff.
“Fear is the sickness. Faith comes from within. You can catch fear, but you can’t catch faith.” Dr. Nicholas Gonzales
It’s a great story for those who profit massively from it, but is it actually working for you?
Is your vision of a meaningful reality filled with orange bottles, calls to insurance, and war on your own body? Or does vitality look more like curiosity, openness to deep and profound meaning, and fearless self-examination?
Read on for more paradigm-splitting thoughtz:






