Why They Glorify Him

They glorify him because he dares.

In a world of lukewarm, soft-spined, easily-offended, algorithm-chasing cowards, a single human who actually dares to live becomes mythological by default. “He” isn’t even a person anymore. He becomes a symbol. A lightning rod. A mirror. A provocation.

They glorify him because he says the thing everyone feels but is too scared to articulate.

They glorify him because he lives like it’s life or death every single day.

People don’t actually glorify niceness. They glorify boldness.

Most people secretly want someone to say:

  • “No, you’re not crazy for wanting more.”
  • “No, you’re not wrong for wanting power, strength, money, art, glory.”
  • “No, you don’t have to be small, modest, quiet, grateful, and obedient.”

When they see a man who embodies it—who actually acts on it—it shakes them. It threatens them. But it also awakens them. That’s why the response is always dual:

  • Some worship him.
  • Some hate him.
  • But nobody can ignore him.

This is “glorification”: the human instinct to latch onto a figure that embodies the feelings we’ve suppressed inside ourselves.

They glorify him because he lives his philosophy.

Most people only talk:

  • They “like” inspirational quotes.
  • They share motivational clips.
  • They say they love greatness, but live like spectators.

But when somebody actually:

  • Lifts insane weight
  • Writes every day
  • Creates media non-stop
  • Thinks independently
  • Refuses to bend to social pressure
  • Designs his own life like a custom supercar

… then people can’t help but lock onto that signal.

They glorify him because he is proof of concept.

He is evidence that:

  • You can ignore the status quo.
  • You can rebuild your life from zero.
  • You can design your own ethics, aesthetics, training, wealth strategy, media, persona.

He becomes a case study in human potential. And humans glorify embodiments of possibility.

They glorify him because he polarizes.

Mediocrity is invisible.

The middle is anonymous.

The “safe” path leads to obscurity.

But the one who:

  • Says “I AM GOD” energy.
  • Proclaims “I am the strongest.”
  • Declares “I am the best.”
  • Treats his life as a work of art.

… will automatically attract mythology.

People need archetypes:

  • The Hero
  • The Villain
  • The Madman
  • The Prophet
  • The Trickster
  • The King

When someone fuses all of those into one unstable, radioactive human—he becomes impossible to categorize. That’s when the glorification kicks in. The brain doesn’t know where to file him, so it upgrades him to legend.

They glorify him because he gives them permission.

Most people are waiting.

Waiting for a sign.

Waiting for someone to say, “It’s okay to want more.”

When they see him:

  • Lifting beyond logic
  • Blogging without filter
  • Thinking beyond politics and culture
  • Eating how he wants
  • Living how he wants
  • Creating without asking for permission

… they subconsciously interpret it as:

“If he can do it, maybe I can too.”

He becomes a permission slip to become more.

Glorification is often not about him at all. It’s about what people see in themselves through him.

They glorify him because he is free.

The deepest human hunger isn’t for pleasure.

It isn’t for comfort.

It isn’t for validation.

The deepest hunger is for freedom:

  • Freedom of thought
  • Freedom of movement
  • Freedom of time
  • Freedom from shame
  • Freedom from fear

When someone is visibly free:

  • Free to speak his mind.
  • Free to make outrageous claims.
  • Free to fail in public.
  • Free to succeed massively.
  • Free to reinvent himself.

… people feel that freedom radiating off him like heat.

They glorify the one who is free because they feel shackled. Admiration is often a disguised cry: “I want that.”

They glorify him because he refuses to kneel.

Modern society wants you kneeling:

  • Kneeling to brands
  • Kneeling to the algorithm
  • Kneeling to “respectability”
  • Kneeling to fear of being canceled
  • Kneeling to weak expectations

But this man does the opposite:

He stands.

He grows.

He speaks.

He lifts.

He creates.

He offends.

He inspires.

He disrespects the invisible rules everyone else follows. That’s why he looks like a god to those still bound by them.

Finally: they glorify him because they need him.

Humans need:

  • Heroes to chase
  • Enemies to fight
  • Examples to follow
  • Extremes to measure themselves against

When someone lives extremely, they become a reference point.

He is no longer just a guy.

He is a coordinate system.

Other people orient their lives around him:

  • “I want to be more like him.”
  • “I never want to be like him.”
    Either way—he shapes their trajectory.

That’s glorification.

So why they glorify him?

Because in a world of copies, he is an original.

Because in a world of spectators, he is a player.

Because in a world of fear, he is audacity.

And deep down, everyone knows:

The one who dares the most deserves the loudest mythology.