Triadic Recovery
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Song-Recovery Workbook
by Barny Wong
Part 3 of the Triadic Recovery series
Song-Recovery Workbook (SRW) is the third movement in a triad of works designed to help readers understand, unwind, and ultimately recover from the subtle psychological forces that shape our paralysis in the face of the climate crisis.Building on the diagnostic clarity of The Six Pillars of Climate Inaction (TSPCI)-a multi-volume publication released across sequential parts-SRW steps into a deeper register. Where TSPCI exposes how individuals, groups, and institutions become shaped by modulation, and where the Triadic Modulation Workbook (TMW) trains readers to recognize those patterns inside relationships and communities, this workbook guides you back to something older: the part of the self that can still hear its own hum beneath the noise.Unlike traditional self-help guides, Song-Recovery Workbook uses a contemplative structure built from:Whispers that open apertures of insightReflection exercises that return the reader to the bodyField-building practices that train presence rather than performanceCommunal tuning rituals that restore resonance between peopleRather than offering techniques to "fix" yourself, SRW shows you how to recover what never disappeared-your innate capacity to sense truth, voice, and belonging even in a fractured world.This workbook is best read after or alongside:TSPCI (Parts I–III): which reveal what modulates us and why we become numbTMW: which maps how groups and relationships choreograph modulationTogether, these three works form a complete ecosystem:TSPCI diagnoses the architecture of inactionTMW translates that architecture into relational choreographySRW guides the reader back into their inner field, where resonance can be restoredSong-Recovery Workbook is not a workbook of mastery.It is a workbook of unblocking.A workbook that helps you remember what your voice sounded like before the world taught you to fracture it.This is not where your transformation ends.It is where you recover the tuning that allows everything else to begin. Barny Wong writes at the intersection of psychology, systems thinking, and human behavior, exploring why we struggle to act on what we already know. With a background shaped by systems-recognition disciplines and years spent observing how people metabolize dissonance in their personal, social, and institutional lives, the author brings a rare blend of emotional clarity and structural insight to the climate conversation. The Six Pillars of Climate Inaction is the culmination of a long inquiry into how individuals and societies learn to look away from harm-and how they can learn to see again. This work is part symbolic mining, part psychological map, and part field guide to reclaiming agency in a world that teaches us to forget our own moral reflexes. The author lives in Seattle and continues to write about perception, symbolic choreography, and the quiet mechanics of change.
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The Six Pillars of Climate Inaction: Silencing Our Bodies
Triadic Recovery Series, #1
by Barny Wong
Part of the Triadic Recovery series
We don't just avoid climate action-we're architected not to act.Across six piercing pillars, The Six Pillars of Climate Inaction exposes the hidden architecture that keeps modern life coherent while the planet unravels. What begins as reflection becomes method through the Rosetta Engine-a diagnostic framework that translates emotion, culture, and system design into one readable code.Part 1, Silencing our Bodies, walks readers through the subtle reflexes that make suppression feel like safety: how clarity is performed instead of embodied, how virtue becomes obedience, and how coherence replaces contact. By the time the mirror becomes the engine, the reader is no longer a spectator-they are inside the machinery of their own avoidance.Wong writes with lyrical precision and systems-level insight born of two decades in engineering and a lifetime encountering symbolic choreography that renders humanity into winners and losers-how societies maintain innocence while enabling harm. Through this fusion of lived experience and structural analysis, he reveals why paralysis is not apathy but metabolism: a choreography of comfort masquerading as virtue.This book offers no checklist, no hero, no villain-only the literacy required to see our defenses in motion and to interrupt them. Readers emerge fluent in their own architecture: able to sense when outdated coherence feels safer than truth and when belonging has been bought, stripping us of agency.The Six Pillars of Climate Inaction is not another climate diagnosis.It is an initiation into sight-a Rosetta Engine for reading the systems that keep us beautiful, coherent, and bound-only to confuse darkness for light. Barny Wong writes at the intersection of psychology, systems thinking, and human behavior, exploring why we struggle to act on what we already know. With a background shaped by systems-recognition disciplines and years spent observing how people metabolize dissonance in their personal, social, and institutional lives, the author brings a rare blend of emotional clarity and structural insight to the climate conversation. The Six Pillars of Climate Inaction is the culmination of a long inquiry into how individuals and societies learn to look away from harm-and how they can learn to see again. This work is part symbolic mining, part psychological map, and part field guide to reclaiming agency in a world that teaches us to forget our own moral reflexes. The author lives in Seattle and continues to write about perception, symbolic choreography, and the quiet mechanics of change.
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