In today’s world, conspiracies are no longer rare. From boardrooms to family feuds, from politics to friendships, the art of secret plotting is often glorified as Cunningness. But what lies beneath this cunning mask is a path of inner destruction.
This blog explores the nature of conspiracy, the mind of a conspirers, and the silent collapse of their Core, despite outward success.
🔍 What Is a Conspiracy, Really?
A conspiracy is not just a secret plot — it’s a betrayal of truth.
It involves:
•Secrecy: Hiding intentions.
•Collusion: Plotting with others.
•Manipulation: Twisting perceptions.
•Self-interest: Gaining control at any cost.
But what is the cost?
The cost is your peace, your character, and your Core.
🧠 Why Do People Conspire? The Psychology Behind It
Every conspiracy is born from a mental weakness. These are the real causes:
1. Desire for Control
They want power, but not through honesty — they seek shortcuts.
2. Fear and Insecurity
They fear losing love, reputation, or resources — so they sabotage others silently.
3. Greed
They crave what isn’t theirs — property, praise, position — and will betray for it.
4. Ego and Revenge
Wounded pride whispers, “Destroy them quietly.”
5. Peer Pressure
Some conspire just to belong — not out of malice, but out of weakness.
But no matter the reason, the result is always the same: loss of self-respect.
🧠 1. Psychological Nature of a Conspirer
Psychologically, such individuals often possess:
a) Insecurity
They don’t feel confident in their abilities, so they manipulate circumstances secretly.
Afraid of failure or rejection, they use indirect means to achieve their desires.
b) Cunning
They are calculating, often planning multiple steps ahead.
They weigh risks, outcomes, and how to avoid detection.
c) Lack of Empathy
They don’t feel guilt or concern about how their actions affect others.
If they do feel guilt, they often justify it as necessary or deserved.
d) Jealousy and Envy
Many conspirers act out of a feeling of inferiority, resenting those who have what they lack—be it love, respect, power, or success.
e) Victim Mentality
They often believe they’ve been wronged or overlooked, making revenge their driving force.
They often see themselves as justified in their actions, believing others are worse.
🎭 2. Behavioral Traits of a Conspirer
•Pretentious kindness: On the surface, they may seem helpful or innocent.
•Double standards: They say one thing, mean another, and do something else.
•Blame shifting: If caught, they deny or blame others.
•Control-seeking: They want to dominate narratives, people, or systems quietly.
•Network builders: They rarely work alone—they form hidden alliances.
🧘♀️ 3. Spiritual Perspective
From a spiritual lens, a conspirer is deeply tamasic (ignorance-based), driven by ego, maya (illusion), and ahankara (false pride).
In Indian texts:
Such individuals are said to have asuric qualities (demonic nature).
Gita (Chapter 16) describes them as:
"Hypocritical, proud, arrogant, angry, harsh and ignorant—such people are born to demoniac natures." (16.4)
Their deeper spiritual state:
•Disconnected from their true self (Atman).
•Bound by karma and future suffering.
•Living in fear, despite their outer dominance.
📉 4. Emotional and Moral Nature
•Emotionally unstable: Though they seem calm, their mind is often filled with fear of exposure.
•Guilt-suppressed: They bury guilt so deep that it turns into bitterness or anxiety.
•Morally flexible: They don’t follow a consistent ethical framework; they bend it to suit their goals.
🧥 The Mask vs The Reality: What a Conspirer Shows vs What They Feel
What They Show :
•Confidence & Charm,
•Laughter & Luxury,
•Bold Opinions,
•Success and Strategy.
What They Feel Inside:
•Insecurity & Fear of Exposure,
•Restlessness & Emptiness,
•Silent Ego & Inner Guilt.
They may fool the world. But they can’t fool themselves.
⚖️ The Inner Collapse Begins Quietly
Every time they lie or plot:
•They disconnect from truth.
•They become smaller — not in appearance, but in core.
•They may sleep in silk beds, but their mind tosses in guilt.
•They may wear smiles, but their soul whispers, “You are not at peace.”
“A thief who fooled people and escapes the law is still imprisoned — by his own guilt, fear, and spiritual collapse.”
💔 Can They Have Real Self-Esteem?
No. What they have is ego — loud, defensive, and fragile.
Real self-esteem comes from:
“Who I am inside is what I show.”
But the conspirer’s motto is:
“What I show is who I pretend to be.”
Their life becomes a performance — one that demands constant applause, because silence scares them.
🌪️ Society’s Blindness: Applauding the Wrong People
We live in a time where:
•Manipulators are promoted,
•Backstabbers are celebrated,
This is not progress — this is collective social decay.
When a society glorifies cunning over authenticity, it is heading toward collapse — not just economically, but socially.
🧠 Is That Really Intelligence?
No, it is slyness, a tool of destruction.
what intelligence truly means:
Intelligence = Awareness + Ethics + Vision.
So, a Conspirer is malicious not intelligent.
🌸 Message to Society
•“Stop calling the cunning ‘clever.’
•Stop calling the corrupt ‘successful.’
•Start asking — what price did they pay inside?”
Let us restore the dignity of honesty,
the value of integrity,
and the power of inner peace.
✨ Final Words
A person who feels proud after doing wrong is not strong — they are deeply lost.
Their illusion will not last. Time, karma, and truth always unveil the hidden face. And if not their own actions will eventually lead to paranoia, distrust, restlessness, and deep irritation within them.
🧨 A Real-Life Example: The Malegaon Bomb Blast — A Conspiracy Unmasked
In 2006, the town of Malegaon in Maharashtra was shaken by bomb blasts that killed dozens and injured many more. What followed was a tragedy deeper than the blasts themselves — an elaborate conspiracy.
Innocent men were arrested, demonized, and painted as terrorists based on fabricated evidence and communal bias. For years, their lives were destroyed, their families torn apart, and the public misled.
But truth cannot remain buried forever. Years later, the NIA (National Investigation Agency) acknowledged that the original arrests were wrong. The real culprits were from an entirely different background — a Hindutva-linked group — proving how political or ideological agendas can twist justice and plant seeds of hatred.
This is not just about a single case — it reveals a pattern. It shows how unrighteous minds justify their actions through false stories, and how common people suffer for the ambitions of a few.
A conspiracy is harmful to the conspirer, the conspired, and the society—no one benefits from it. Let us get rid of this vice through awareness; and if that is not possible, let us fight it wholeheartedly.
And those who cannot abandon this vice and are willing to become vicious must be eradicated completely.
Comments
Post a Comment
"By commenting, you agree that your name and comment will be publicly visible. Please do not share personal details. Comments may be moderated before appearing."