A belief is simply a thought that we grant the status of reality.
But this “reality” does not actually exist unless we believe in it.
It is created by the belief itself.
And since everything in this world arises from consciousness, what you believe, you project.
And what you project, you experience.
Labubu: a mental form turned social form
Labubu the doll, at its core, is just a shape. An image. An appearance.
But once it is loaded with meaning — through fear, humor, obsession, or strangeness — it becomes a collective mental form.
It is no longer just a doll. It becomes an egregore.
And this egregore comes to life in the collective unconscious because it is fueled by attention, emotion, and projection.
Why do corporations seize on this?
Because corporations have understood something powerful: reality doesn’t matter.
What matters is what people are looking at, what they believe in, what they share, what triggers their emotions — even fear or rejection.
And the weirder, darker, or more disturbing the belief, the more tension it creates — and the more it attracts.
The more it attracts, the more it grows… until it becomes “real” in the collective imagination.
It’s not an object they’re selling.
It’s a belief — charged with a vibration — that is made viral.
But why does it work?
Because as long as a human being is not reconnected to their true origin,
they remain a slave to their beliefs,
a slave to their fear of the void,
and thus… a slave to what they don’t understand.
And when the mind doesn’t understand, it invents a story to feel safe.
And if that story can shock, disturb, fascinate, or surprise — the mind feels alive.
That’s where corporations step in:
They offer ready-made beliefs to feed the hungry mind.
What Labubu reveals about our world
Labubu is neither good nor bad.
It is a symptom — a mirror of the collective unconscious seeking to fill the inner void with the strange, the curious, the viral, the spectacular.
But this phenomenon unveils a deeper truth:
The world is only a reflection of our collective beliefs.
Nothing is truly “real” unless it is believed in.
And what we believe with intensity becomes real — even if it’s completely absurd.
In summary (Nada Rachid style):
The world is created through our beliefs.
A doll is just a form until we give it power (through projection).
Corporations don’t need you to believe in good — they just need you to believe in something, anything… as long as your attention is invested in it.
What you call “reality” is nothing more than a field of shared illusions.
As long as you haven’t realized that you are the source of all projection, you remain manipulable.
But the moment you become aware… nothing can manipulate you anymore.
Not a doll.
Not a belief.
Not a viral trend.
Nada Rachid