Today, information is everywhere. With the internet in our pocket, we can search for anything within seconds. Social media is filled with self-proclaimed experts and influencers, each with an opinion ready to be shared. We live in an age where knowing facts is mistaken for wisdom, where the spreading of misinformation is omnipresent and where life experience is often overlooked.
Yet the kind of knowledge that truly guides us has never been something you can find with a quick search. Indigenous peoples across the world understood this. In North America, First Nations turned to their elders, not Google, when they needed answers about the land, the animals, or the meaning of community. In Costa Rica, the Bribri and Cabécar looked to those who carried stories shaped by generations of living close to the jungle and the mountains. In Africa, elders’ voices carried the lessons of survival, respect, and balance, passed on through stories around the fire.
Their wisdom was not built on headlines or trends. It came from watching the seasons shift, learning through hardship, and observing life long enough to see patterns others could not. Elders carried a depth of perspective that only years of living, struggling, and surviving can bring. They were not just respected, they were the heart of the community.
In our modern world, we sometimes believe that because we have instant access to information, we “know” things. We may feel confident quoting statistics, sharing viral posts, or citing “experts” found via Google. Yet that confidence can slip into a dangerous place when we don’t question the source, when we don’t check the foundation.
Contrast that with our world today. We often dismiss the elderly as out of touch, while hanging on the words of the newest online personality who may have little more than confidence and a platform. The word “Boomer” is now used as derogatory and we prize the quick answer over the thoughtful one, forgetting that a life well lived is the truest source of understanding.
Imagine if we brought back the practice of listening to our elders. What would happen if we set aside the noise of social media and turned instead to those who have seen entire lifetimes of change? What if we remembered that wisdom is not only about what you know, but about when and how you apply it?
The world might be quieter, calmer, and perhaps kinder. We would recognize that experience matters, that stories carry truths beyond data, and that a patient word can carry more weight than a thousand posts online.
The balance we long for may not come from more technology or faster answers. It may come from sitting down, listening to those who have walked ahead of us, and honouring the wisdom they carry. For in their stories is not only the past, but the guidance we need for the future.
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