

Russia & Ukraine
– The Energetic Couple Check-

When Fear Rules the Field
In the headlines, the war between Russia and Ukraine appears to be a struggle over territory, alliances, and spheres of influence. Through the lens of the Energetic Perception Theory (EPT), however, a deeper pattern emerges: a clash of fear-driven fields that mirror and reinforce one another.

Russia – Fear of Being Forgotten
Russia clings to the image of greatness, language, and indivisible unity.
Behind its martial stance lies a deep fear of dissolution:
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Fear of fading into history.
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Fear of its language mixing and disappearing.
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Fear that its old identity no longer holds.
Like a man who locks up his partner out of fear of losing her, Russia tries to hold on to Ukraine. Aggression here is only the mask of fear.

Ukraine – Fear of Dependence
Ukraine, on the other hand, struggles for independence and self-worth. Yet this struggle carries its own fear:
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Fear of being worthless if it merges into a larger community.
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Fear of remaining a pawn without full independence.
The result: debt, reliance on the West, and a country that, through war itself, loses more and more of its substance. Paradoxically, the harder Ukraine tries to prove independence, the more dependent it becomes.



Mirror of Fears
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Russia fears dissolution through being forgotten, and through aggression creates isolation.
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Ukraine fears dissolution through dependence, and through debt and destruction creates new dependency.
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Both end up in a resonance loop, manifesting precisely what they seek to avoid.
The Role of the West
The United States and Europe appear as saviors – providing billions in aid, weapons, and promises of reconstruction. Yet here, too, a mirror is at work:
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High levels of debt themselves.
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The need to maintain the role of global protector.
The West reacts not only out of solidarity, but also out of its own inner pattern:
stabilizing its self-image by giving.
Energetic Truth
From an EPT perspective, this war is less about “fighting over borders” and more about a struggle for identity and worth. Both sides fear dissolution – and both manifest dissolution in the external field.Peace will not arise from more weapons or more pride, but from a transformation of inner fear:
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Russia must learn that greatness comes not from holding on, but from trust.
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Ukraine must realize that worth grows not from standing alone, but from resonance and cooperation.
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The West must see that saving only heals when it also addresses its own inner emptiness.
Conclusion
This Reality Check reveals: the war is a mirror of collective fields of fear. As long as fear sets the frequency, the outer world will remain destructive. Only when trust, resonance, and self-worth enter the field can a new balance emerge – beyond coercion, guilt, and endless dependency.
