For many ordinary people right now, the mental state is: no large army pressing down, yet feeling chaos and disorder; no dark clouds, yet feeling wind and rain swaying; clearly in broad daylight, but always feeling that invisible forces are operating everywhere. Because what truly makes people uneasy is often not the disaster itself, but uncertainty. When old rules gradually become invalid, and new rules are not yet clear; when surface order still exists, but the underlying logic keeps changing; when information increases, but credible explanations decrease, what people lose is not safety itself, but their sense of understanding of the world. So anxiety begins to spread, not because danger is seen, but because it is no longer possible to determine where danger will appear from.

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