Driving to work is full of madness and absurdity. Most people have the radio on which pumps them with a mixture of fake hype, propaganda and nonsense. Some of the news is actually useful, as they glue each nation together. Rarely the radio is educational. Except for Coast to Coast Radio Station which is talking most about the aliens and so-called ufology. You may be disheartened to hear what they say. The level of ufology today is bleak. We need more information from you and less disinformation from everywhere else. I don't think C2C is broadcasting in the morning. I used to listen to it over the internet but stopped as I discovered that I like listening to channelings much better.
Nowadays, people can listen to more meaningful recordings such as audiobooks and podcasts, but this requires a bit of setup, so only geeks do that. Thinking of the education of humans, consider this channel of education. Audio broadcasts, radio, especially during commuting hours are best for delivering your information. Of course, it has to be able to compete with available stations in entertaining and informational value.
Unfortunately, the majority of alien and angelic channelings are very low on entertaining and informational value. After listening to them for a while people stop because of these reasons:
1. The messages give the same information over and over.
2. The information content is very low. There is almost no new information.
3. Some of the information is doubtful. Especially disappointing are failed predictions, such as Dec 21, 2012 predictions.
Bashar is an exception. His channelings are extremely helpful practically, very entertaining and informational. I wish he was allowed to disclose more. I believe, he is under tight restrictions what he can disclose and I wish these were lifted.
I suggest all other consciousnesses channeling to earth learn from Bashar. He is an exceptional speaker. I haven't heard any human speaking that well. He speaks in a way that is adjusted to the human way of understanding. He provides enough examples, analogies and metaphors. The dynamics and energy of his speech are exceptionally well-tuned to our receptivity. He is passionate and wise. Sometimes he is a bit too rough, but this creates some drama which many listeners appreciate.
Why people have to commute to work for hours each day may be a mystery to you. Even humans rarely understand that. They take it as given.
Many if not most humans of civilized countries live in cities and spend hours commuting. The reasons for that are crime, inequality, and the rigidness of the system. America these days may be among the most mobile countries. Many Americans can move easily, they carry very few belongings and can afford to rent a living place near work. Getting a few extra hours every day is certainly worth it. Others have to commute. When I worked at Bethesda and my wife worked in Baltimore we had to commute 2-3 hours every day. This was quite unhealthy. On another hand, this was the time when I listened to audiobooks and university audio lectures and this was one of the most exciting times during the day. As my working day was coming to the end, I was looking forward to the time I would be driving home and continuing my listening. Check out "teaching company". Their recordings of university lectures are exceptional! This is the best of what the current humanity has in producing an area of thought and philosophy.
So what prevents people from living close to work? It is hard to change a job band it is hard to change a place of living. Generally, city planning is done to separate living zones from work zones to prevent crime. In America, living zones have only people who live there and drive there in their cars. So poor people without cars, if they walk to a living zone could be easily identified and moved away by the police.
Work zones have restaurants. Some People eat in restaurants during lunch breaks and after work.
Cooking at home is much cheaper if you have family and if you know how to cook. Now, the last couple of generations often grew up not knowing how to cook. This became possible because food became relatively cheap and people are relatively well off.
The second reason for commuting far is poverty. People are either truly poor or believe they are poor. People do many things only because they have been taught to live this way. Many believe that they need to sacrifice a couple of hours every day to commute to work because (1) the place where they live provides better schooling for children and (2) they need to take the best-paid job even if it is not as interesting and requires longer commute. The idea of self-sacrifice for children is very strong, especially in mothers. The logic that they could use these hours on educating children is not popular. Somehow educating one's own children is hard. People prefer trusting much of that to professionals.
Interestingly, we are still at the beginning of the working day and so much is said. It looks like the whole book can be written around the typical working day. This seems like a very productive and natural idea. This is how our life revolves; we repeat our cycles over and over and due to variety and randomness this creates a rich experience.
Speaking of commuting and free time, I will tell you a story about my grand cousin Manya. Somehow it happened that she didn't have a husband and children. So she treated me very kindly like a very close relative. The reason she had no children is sad. She survived World War II as a young Jewish woman in Russia, but most males of her generation were killed at war. Those who survived were either not good or taken. Since the minds of this time were very confused, she didn't understand what was happening at the time, but only at old age, she was able to look back and realize the reasoning. At the time of Stalin, it was prohibited for people not to work, and for Jews, it was extremely difficult to find a job, so she was lucky to find an engineering position in a nuclear bomb project. Again, due to secrecy, she realized that she has been working on the bomb only in later years. A typical day in Leningrad in Stalin years was similar to the one I am describing, except fear was way stronger, confusion was phenomenal, brainwashing was extreme and all done by federal speakers broadcasting everywhere: in apartments, on streets and at work. At the time it was done through wires, not wirelessly like now. Propaganda was fierce.