In recent days, headlines have warned: “The risk of an economic recession in the U.S. is the highest in years.”
But beyond interest rates and market corrections lies a deeper question that few are willing to ask. Are financial crises engineered? And what happens when we stop viewing economic collapse purely as a financial issue—and begin to recognize its spiritual side?
Money as Energy: A River, Not a Container
To understand the true nature of any economic collapse, we must first change the way we perceive money to see if financial crises are indeed engineered.
Most people treat money as something material—something you either have or don’t. A resource to chase, protect, or fear. But from a spiritual perspective, money is not a thing. It is energy. Like all energy, it is meant to move. When it flows, it nourishes and connects. When it’s hoarded, restricted, or blocked, it stagnates—and with it, entire systems begin to decay.
Just like damming a river can destroy the surrounding ecosystem, blocking the flow of abundance can trigger fear, distrust, and scarcity in the collective consciousness. In this light, an economic collapse is not just a financial failure—it’s an energetic imbalance. A reflection of how far we’ve drifted from natural flow.
Are Financial Crises Engineered by Design?
This leads to a larger and more unsettling question: Are financial crises engineered?
Are they truly random, uncontrollable events triggered by markets—or are they, at times, deliberately created by those who stand to benefit from mass confusion and instability?
Consider the patterns. Sudden market crashes. Coordinated media narratives. Panic spreading faster than logic. It raises the possibility that some financial collapses are not accidents, but calculated tools. By manufacturing fear, certain powers maintain control. People preoccupied with survival don’t resist. They obey and work harder. They accept restrictions they wouldn’t tolerate under normal circumstances.
This form of engineered collapse serves a purpose: it keeps the population locked in scarcity mode. And a population in fear is a population that can be managed.
The Spiritual Side of Economic Collapse
But here is where the spiritual side of economic collapse becomes essential. While systems may fall, the human spirit does not. A collapsing economy can be a wake-up call—a reminder to return to values we’ve neglected. Connection. Creativity. Compassion. Trust.
Many who experience personal or collective financial crises report something unexpected. Beyond the loss and the engineered collapse, they find clarity. Beyond the fear, there is peace. In losing what they thought they needed, they found what they truly are.
This is the deeper meaning of collapse. It strips away illusion. It shows us that abundance isn’t numbers in a bank account—it’s energy in motion. A mindset of enoughness. A willingness to give and receive freely. It’s trust, not in a system, but in life itself.
Reclaiming the Flow
If financial crises are engineered, then perhaps the most revolutionary act we can take is to restore movement. To stop freezing. To start flowing again. Not recklessly—but consciously. Through collaboration, generosity, and grounded awareness.
Because the true recovery doesn’t begin when markets bounce back. It begins when we remember that our worth was never defined by them in the first place.
So are financial crises engineered? Maybe. But what they truly reveal is how deeply we’ve forgotten our power—and how urgently we’re being called to reclaim it.