Homebrewed Christianity

The Exhausted Soul and a World Gone Mute: The Economy That Ate Your Soul and Wants to Blame You

10 snips
Feb 1, 2026
They unpack why modern life feels like a whirlpool that requires constant acceleration and how that exhaustion is structural, not personal. The conversation explores Rosa's idea of resonance as an alternative to a growth-driven economy. Topics include how acceleration shrinks time, the AAA ideal of availability, the three forms of systemic burnout, and how liturgy and receptive practices train us to listen for real encounter.
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ANECDOTE

Realizing Exhaustion Is Structural

  • Tripp Fuller describes a moment staring at his inbox when he realized he was losing, perpetually falling behind despite productivity hacks.
  • He frames that exhaustion as a shared, structural condition rather than personal failure.
INSIGHT

Dynamic Stabilization Explains Endless Acceleration

  • Rosa's concept of dynamic stabilization likens modern life to riding a bicycle that must keep moving to avoid collapse.
  • This shows acceleration is systemic: we must keep running just to stay in place.
INSIGHT

Whirlpool Metaphor Shows Collective Entrapment

  • Fuller offers the whirlpool image to stress relational nature of acceleration: we're caught together in a current we created but no longer control.
  • The metaphor links personal exhaustion with ecological and systemic limits about to buckle.
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