-- 
*Mar*Thanks for sharing this—there’s a strong, poetic core here. I’ll do
this in two parts, as you asked:
------------------------------
1. Edited and Improved Version

*(I’ve focused on clarity, flow, and tightening the argument while
preserving your voice and intent.)*
*Belief Becoming Fact*

We suffer from a damaging social expectation about advanced age—the belief
that old age inevitably means disability. Even people who remain physically
fit often become disabled simply because this expectation surrounds them.
If advanced age were instead understood as the accumulation of perception
and understanding, as the expansion of one’s paradigm of awareness, then
old age would be recognized as a gift.

Unfortunately, in the name of economic, industrial, and urban
development—promoted as “progress”—entire forests have been destroyed. The
few trees that are allowed to survive in damaged soil seem to radiate
distress. Whether it is a blade of grass or a great tree, all living
organisms are fundamentally emotional, and emotional intelligence is their
intelligence. The whole of flora and fauna is emotional. In free and
healthy nature, a macro flow of emotional upliftment exists, giving every
organism a deep taste for life.

In modern cities and towns, this reassuring presence of flora and fauna is
largely eliminated. Seniors begin to fear their own aging, each day waiting
for the end, often holding a dark and anxious view of death.

Where nature is free and healthy, beliefs that reinforce life continuously
develop, and those beliefs naturally turn into facts. If old age is
accepted as the accumulation of perception, understanding, and increasing
fitness, that belief embeds itself into the living fabric of flora and
fauna.

But where nature is destroyed and demoralization fills the troposphere, one
need not wait for advanced age to feel old. The poison in the air causes
every organism to develop premature aging, depression, and decay.

Free and healthy nature has the fundamental quality of generating positive
beliefs and transforming them into lived realities. Today, the destruction
of nature as a core feature of economic life has robbed many people of
their youth itself.

Modern paradigms—Cartesianism, which sees the world as mechanical and
emotionless; Darwinian interpretations emphasizing constant war among
organisms; the idea of the “selfish gene”; and the portrayal of bacteria
solely as disease-causing agents—have created a widespread terror of free
nature.

We know that all activity depends on the vast coordination of trillions of
cells within us. Each cell requires bacteria to function. Our life is, in
truth, the collective life of diverse bacteria within us.

Yet portraying bacteria as enemies has made us fearful of an unseen threat
lurking in nature. We fear nature because we have lost our fundamental
trust in it. We fail to recognize that we are limbs of nature, and that
every limb is enabled by bacteria for its activity.

We do not become unfit because of age, but because of these negative
paradigms. To recognize that advanced age can mean greater fitness and
vitality, we need free and healthy nature to reinforce us. Even a tiny
plant can strengthen your spirit if you offer it loving and approving
attention.

Beliefs become facts. In free and healthy nature, we develop positive and
reinforcing beliefs. In cities and towns where nature is destroyed, fears,
terrors, and negative beliefs continuously turn into lived realities.

We do not need more pills and doctors alone. We need free, healthy, and
lush flora and fauna.

— *Y. M. Sarma*
------------------------------
2. My Views

I find your central insight powerful: *belief, environment, and biology are
deeply entangled*. Modern science increasingly supports parts of what
you’re expressing—especially in fields like psychosomatic medicine,
epigenetics, microbiome research, and environmental psychology. The idea
that expectations about aging influence physical outcomes is already well
documented.

Where your writing becomes most compelling is in reframing *old age as an
expansion of perception rather than decline*. That is a radical and needed
counter-narrative in a culture obsessed with productivity and youth.

That said, a few gentle critiques and refinements:

   -

   *“Beliefs becoming facts”* is true psychologically and socially, but
   biologically it works indirectly. Beliefs shape behavior, stress hormones,
   immune response, and lifestyle choices—*which then* shape physical
   outcomes. Making this causal chain more explicit would strengthen your
   argument for skeptical readers.
   -

   The idea that *all flora and fauna are emotional* is philosophically
   rich, but scientifically controversial. Framing this as *“responsive,
   relational, and communicative”* rather than strictly emotional might
   help bridge poetic insight and scientific credibility.
   -

   Saying *“We do not need pills and doctors”* risks being read as
   dismissive of medicine. I think your deeper point is that *medicine
   without nature is incomplete*, not that medicine is unnecessary.
   Clarifying this would prevent misinterpretation.

What I deeply agree with is this:
*Modern urban life quietly teaches people to fear their own bodies, their
age, and nature itself.* That fear ages us faster than time does.

Your piece reads like a manifesto against mechanistic living and a call to
restore trust—trust in nature, in aging, and in life’s intelligence. With
slight sharpening and careful framing, it could speak not just poetically,
but persuasively, to a much wider audience.

If you’d like, I can:

   -

   Make this more *scientifically grounded* without losing its spirit
   -

   Help adapt it for *publication* (journal, magazine, blog)
   -

   Or rewrite it in a more *philosophical or lyrical* style

Just tell me the direction.

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