Stardust and the Illusion of Independence

Or: How to Be a Completely Self-Made Collection of Stardust

Has the illusion of independence enabled ongoing crises and trauma”

By Chuck Woolery. Rockville, Md.

Why it matters:
The idea that we are separate—politically, biologically, economically, even cosmically—is shaping decisions that undermine health, security, and survival. Reality keeps proving the opposite.

The big picture

The U.S. now effectively has three political identities: Democrat, Republican, and Independent. All three depend on the same fragile assumption: that people, systems, and nations can stand alone.

They can’t.

Not from global instability.
Not from cyber threats.
Not from pandemics.
Not from climate disruption.

The chaos we’re experiencing isn’t random. It’s the predictable outcome of designing systems around a myth that doesn’t exist in nature: independence.

Reality check: Everything is connected

Former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Jen Easterly put it plainly:

“Everything is connected, everything is interdependent, so everything is vulnerable… This has to be a global effort.”

Shortly after she was replaced, CISA itself was hacked.

Translation:
You can’t protect infrastructure, democracy, or daily life by pretending systems operate in isolation.

What most Americans don’t know

In a 2014 congressional hearing, national security experts warned that a major electromagnetic pulse (EMP)—from solar storms or nuclear attack—could:

  • Knock out the U.S. electric grid for months or years
  • Collapse communications, food, water, finance, and transportation
  • Kill up to 9 in 10 Americans through cascading system failure

This isn’t sci-fi. It’s systems physics.


Start with science (it doesn’t care about slogans)

Every atom in your body was forged in a star.

  • Iron in your blood → supernova debris
  • Carbon in your cells → ancient stellar exhaust
  • Calcium in your bones → cosmic recycling

Humans are not self-made.
We are star-made.

As Albert Einstein understood, the same physical laws shaping galaxies govern neurons in your brain. Claiming independence from the universe is like a wave declaring independence from the ocean.

Poetic. Incorrect. Dangerous.


You are not an individual. You are a consortium.

Your body contains roughly as many microbial cells as human ones.

  • Digestion? Microbes.
  • Immunity? Microbes.
  • Mood? Microbes.

If they stop cooperating, you don’t “power through.”
You get sick—or die.

You breathe oxygen made by plants.
You eat food grown by soil ecosystems.
Your thoughts depend on glucose powered by sunlight produced by nuclear fusion in the Sun.

When we say “I’m independent,” what we mean is:

“I’m benefiting from a vast web of cooperation I’ve forgotten exists.”

Health: The myth of the isolated body

We treat health as personal responsibility.
Reality treats it as a network effect.

  • Viruses ignore borders
  • Pollution ignores property lines
  • Trauma spreads across families and generations

Underinvest in sanitation, prevention, and environmental protection—and then act surprised when systems fail.

Health isn’t individual.
It’s globally relational.


National security: The fortified-island fantasy

Leaders talk about sovereignty as if nations are sealed containers.

They’re not.

  • Supply chains cross continents
  • Cyber threats ignore geography
  • Climate systems circulate regardless of passports
  • A drought here destabilizes food prices there

Weapons don’t stop pandemics.
Borders don’t block atmospheric carbon.
Firewalls don’t halt systemic collapse.

21st-century security =
Public health + ecological stability + economic cooperation + climate resilience.

That’s why aligning around the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals isn’t idealism—it’s risk management.


The personal and organizational trap

Belief in separateness creates two failures:

1) Exaggerated control

“My success is entirely my own.”
(Conveniently ignores teachers, infrastructure, public systems, and planetary stability.)

2) Perceived helplessness

“Nothing I do matters.”
(Ignores network effects and collective action.)

Reality sits in between.

We are not omnipotent.
We are not irrelevant.
We are participants in systems that scale when aligned.


The hidden cost: Loneliness

The deepest damage of the independence myth isn’t political. It’s psychological.

Separateness fuels:

  • Anxiety
  • Tribalism
  • “Us vs. them” thinking

Interdependence does the opposite.

  • Compassion becomes logical
  • Cooperation becomes strategic
  • Unity becomes rational

It’s hard to demonize people when your food, medicine, security, and atmosphere depend on them.


A better story

Independence feels empowering.
It simplifies complexity.
It fits on banners and bumper stickers.

But it cannot sustain civilization.

We are:

  • Stardust organized into bodies
  • Bodies embedded in ecosystems
  • Ecosystems nested in economies
  • Economies entangled across nations
  • All governed by unified physical laws

Recognizing interdependence doesn’t weaken freedom.
It clarifies responsibility.

The maturity of civilization won’t be measured by how loudly we declare independence—but by how wisely we design for interdependence.

Less fireworks.
More survival.

That’s the script worth flipping.