Living Earth, Living Value: Observations on Resources, Time, and Exchange By Jonathan Olvera – September 29, 2025
Living Earth, Living Value: Observations on Resources, Time, and Exchange
By Jonathan Olvera – September 29, 2025
Progress is satisfying, and the Earth is abundant in fruit. Time itself surveys the structures of the year, revealing treasures hidden within—this, to me, is the most satisfying of all.
My home is alive; it teems and breathes with life. My new theory of resource banking, coining, and currency transactions—focused on the live valuation of water as a “sphere of liquids”—may, in fact, be correct. My local observations continue, and I work to collect more information in my own time, reaching toward the boundaries of my neighbors and their efforts to phase the construction of what I call “the Shadow” within the depths of the Earth.
This control location remains well defined by its units and place. It cannot easily be said to vary. I have sought to define my own boundaries and to reflect on how the rules of a global community have already affected them.
Where there is no defined value—no clear spheres of control or measures of profit—fishing and the hunt for wild game become themselves an economy, a living exchange. This too is something worth observing.
All the time I have spent observing and detailing the treasures of the Earth—variations of deerskin, mining profits, and the chasing of rain—has taught me that the picture is rarely whole. To build and ensure a control that can endure the contacts of men, women, children, cattle, and even neighbors is no small feat. It is, however, something one can effect.
When making observations not only of the “skin” of things but also of their prakritic (natural) inventory, another layer emerges: the realm of stone. Stone carries its own cycles, temperatures, and vibratory interpretations—its own “sphere” much like that of humans. It is fascinating to observe stones as having physical “shadows,” and men having the same in their own properties. How interesting this mirroring is.
It is equally entertaining to observe the sphere of the Earth itself—the control of the Sun, the pull of gravity, and the exchange of high temperatures—while looking up into the void of the sky. One can see plainly that the Earth is a sphere with an atmosphere; one becomes aware of the gaseous state, of plasma arching, of exchanges more medieval than modern in their functions.
This exchange—this constant rotation and transfer of gases, liquids, plasma, and stones—brings forth fruit. It is a worthwhile observation of our patterns and their movements.
Continuing this line of thought, one must consider how time modifies habitable areas to achieve a fair outcome. Control of such processes enables the most important instructions of stewardship: the collection of precipitates, hygienic storage, and the protection of material from humidity, wetness, or solar destruction. This is important.
To ensure a promising outcome, it is said that one will receive as one gives. This may be compared to a day of fishing, or life on the ocean. One would have to work as an ocean laborer—or earn as a fisherman—to understand the difference. To become learned at sea is to enter a wholly different form of knowledge.
These differences are open to understanding. As a civil notary, I find it useful to mark these differences; understanding the circumstance of a fisherman or a man who works the ocean could prove a great benefit. A man who does not go to the ocean will never understand the ocean—never understand its dangerous life within or what is necessary for a man on land to feel achievement.
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