The Golden Future

The Golden Future

A Book That Feels Like Remembering Who We Are

There are some books you read… and then there are books you recognise.

The Golden Future is one of those books.

It doesn’t arrive as something entirely new. It doesn’t feel like you’re being handed information to learn and store away. It feels more like something is being gently uncovered — like a layer is being lifted, and underneath it is something that was always there, just waiting for you to be ready to see it.

I came across this book in one of those moments that feels almost too aligned to ignore. I was in the middle of my Level 1 Reiki certification, tucked into the Yoga & Oils studio that felt like its own little world. In between sessions, I wandered through the shop, not really looking for anything in particular — just letting myself be drawn to whatever caught my attention.

And my attention landed very clearly on one book.

The Golden Future.

At the same time, during the training, Renee — who was guiding us — began speaking about something she doesn’t usually teach. She laughed as she said it, explaining that she felt strongly called to go beyond the traditional seven chakras and speak about the twelve chakra system instead.

That moment landed deeply for me, because I had only just been introduced to that concept. It was new, but it already felt familiar in a way I couldn’t fully explain.

And then she mentioned Diana Cooper as someone to explore if we wanted to go deeper into that space.

So when I picked up the book and saw those same threads reflected back at me — expanded chakras, ascension, a completely different framework for reality — it didn’t feel like coincidence.

It felt like a continuation of something that had already begun.

But what unfolded as I read it went far beyond that initial moment.

Because this book doesn’t just touch on one idea. It paints an entire vision of what humanity could look like if we moved beyond the systems, structures, and limitations that currently define so much of our world.

It speaks about a future where the way we live is fundamentally different — not in a way that feels technological or artificial, but in a way that feels deeply connected to the Earth. Homes are no longer built in harsh, disconnected ways, but are designed in harmony with the land itself, using natural materials, curved forms, and energy-conscious design. There is a sense that living spaces are not separate from nature, but an extension of it.

Food, too, is described differently. Not processed, not mass-produced, but grown with intention, in alignment with the land, nourishing not just the body but the energy of the people consuming it. There is an emphasis on purity, on simplicity, on returning to a way of living that supports life rather than depleting it.

And then there’s the way people exist within community.

This was something that really stood out to me.

The book describes a world where people are no longer isolated in the way we are now. Where connection is natural, where cooperation replaces competition, where communities function as supportive, interconnected systems rather than fragmented individuals trying to navigate everything alone.

There’s a softness to it. A sense of ease.

But at the same time, it’s not passive. It’s conscious. Intentional.

One of the most fascinating aspects of the book is how it weaves spirituality into everyday life — not as something separate or reserved for certain moments, but as something that is simply part of being human. Communication with animals, connection with higher beings, an awareness of energy — all of these things are described as normal, integrated aspects of existence.

And this is where it starts to stretch the mind a little.

Because for some people, that might feel like a leap. It might feel like something that sits outside of what we’ve been taught is possible.

But the way it’s presented doesn’t feel forceful. It doesn’t feel like it’s trying to convince you.

It simply says… this is what becomes possible when consciousness expands.

And whether you fully believe every aspect of that or not, there’s something about it that invites you to soften your perspective, even just slightly.

To consider that maybe reality isn’t as fixed as we’ve been led to believe.

One of the strongest threads running through the book is the idea of energetic evolution. That humanity is not static, that we are not meant to stay as we are, but that we are constantly moving through cycles of growth and transformation.

The concept of the 260,000-year cycle of masculine dominance is one of the more striking ideas presented. The suggestion that for an extended period of time, masculine energy — structure, control, logic, dominance — has been at the forefront of human experience.

And now, we are reaching the end of that cycle.

What we are witnessing in the world — the disruption, the instability, the emotional intensity — is not simply chaos. It is a recalibration. A rebalancing.

The return of the feminine.

Not as a replacement, not as something that overtakes, but as something that restores harmony.

Intuition, connection, creativity, compassion — these are not “soft” qualities in this context. They are powerful, necessary forces that bring balance back into a system that has been weighted heavily in one direction.

And when I read that, it didn’t feel like a theory.

It felt like a reflection of what is already happening.

It’s something I see in the collective. It’s something I feel in the work I do. It’s something that people are beginning to recognise within themselves, even if they don’t always have the language for it yet.

That was probably the most powerful part of the book for me.

Not the vision of the future itself — but the way it connected that vision to what is already unfolding now.

Because it removes the idea that this is something far away, something we might reach “one day.”

Instead, it frames it as something we are already participating in.

And that idea is reinforced in the final part of the book.

The conclusion doesn’t feel like an ending. It feels like a shift in perspective.

A reminder that the future isn’t something that just arrives.

It’s something that is created.

That what we focus on, we energise. That what we speak about, we amplify. That the way we think, the way we feel, the way we move through our lives — all of it contributes to the direction things are heading.

And then that final line:

Make the golden future NOW.

There’s something about that which feels grounding.

Because it brings everything back into the present moment.

It removes the distance. The waiting. The idea that change happens somewhere outside of us.

It places it right here.

In the small choices.
In the quiet shifts.
In the way we choose to show up, even when no one is watching.

For me, this book didn’t change my direction.

It confirmed it.

It gave language to things I was already sensing — in myself, in my work, in the people I connect with.

It deepened my trust in that knowing.

And it reinforced something I feel strongly when it comes to my girls — that they are not here to fit into the world as it currently exists, but to create something new. Something more aligned. Something more expansive.

And maybe that’s what this book ultimately offers.

Not answers.

Not rules.

But a vision.

One that invites you to feel into what is possible… and then decide, in your own way, how you want to be part of creating it.

And if something in this stirred within you — that quiet sense of recognition, that feeling that there might be more — that’s exactly the space I hold in my readings.

 

Sending you so much love,

Sarah xx

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