The warnings were never meant to frighten, but to awaken awareness. As political systems strain and trust in institutions thins, many are revisiting the words of Edgar Cayce—not as prophecy, but as reflection. His focus was less on events and more on imbalance: between power and conscience, progress and responsibility, outer success and inner life.
Cayce did not speak of a fixed future. He described moments of choice, when societies are forced to face the direction they’ve been moving in. History, in that view, isn’t something that simply happens—it’s shaped daily by human decisions.
Seen this way, 2026 is not a prediction of collapse but a mirror. Long-building pressures like division, spiritual fatigue, and environmental strain are becoming harder to ignore. The discomfort they create may signal reckoning rather than ruin.
The deeper question is not what will happen to us, but what we choose to sustain. Cayce emphasized that change begins quietly—through individual awareness, ethical choices, and community care. If a turning point is near, it is forming from within, one deliberate choice at a time.