Today, I found myself ruminating on a theory that’s been orbiting the outskirts of my mind like a persistent satellite—one that never quite makes contact, but always manages to influence the tides. It’s the notion that the more positivity, light, or love you emit into the world, the more forcefully the world pushes back with an equal and opposite resistance.
Like some twisted Newtonian principle, only this time it's emotions, not motion.
It’s poetic really—tragically poetic. You spend days, weeks, maybe years, trying to be the sun in someone’s storm, the calm in someone’s chaos. You radiate warmth, extend kindness, offer pieces of yourself without price tags. And yet... what you often get in return isn't always gratitude, or even neutrality. Sometimes, it’s hostility. Sometimes, it’s being taken for granted. Sometimes, it’s silence so cold it burns louder than screams.
I’m not saying positivity is futile—it’s just not always met with applause. You’d think the universe would throw confetti at kindness, that being a beacon would earn you safe passage through the dark. But more often, being light only makes you more visible to the monsters.
And yet—yet—there’s something sacred in it. Maybe the point of light is not to conquer the dark, but to make its own damn stand despite the dark. To dare the shadows to do their worst, and smile anyway. To keep glowing not because the world deserves it, but because you do.
But it begs a question that keeps digging into my ribs like an ill-placed truth:
What if the backlash to your positivity isn’t punishment—but proof that it matters?
Maybe it’s friction that makes the spark. Maybe impact always leaves a bruise.
Maybe… just maybe… the universe is fair—in its own perverse little way. You give love, and the universe says, “Alright, let's see how badly you want to keep giving.” You show hope, and the universe replies, “Let’s test that theory.” And in that moment, you decide if your light is performative or pure. Whether you're doing it for applause… or because it’s simply who you are.
I feel the wear and tear of my own attempts at being the light. Some days it feels like dragging the sun uphill. But here's a Thaddism to tattoo on the soul:
"For the most part, I may be an underrated man of the millennium… but I’d rather burn with authenticity than bask in hollow praise."
So maybe the pushback isn’t cosmic punishment. Maybe it's proof that light still holds power. And power, my dear journal, never goes unchallenged.