We often imagine viruses as lone wanderers — microscopic threats, acting blindly and selfishly.
But I think we forget: even the smallest beings carry ancient memory.
Even viruses know how to listen, speak… and cooperate.
A new scientific study has revealed something astonishing: giant viruses — those enormous, ancient strains that dwell deep in oceans and soil — are not as silent and solitary as we once believed. They use ancient molecular networks to communicate with one another, to share strategy, to perhaps even coordinate attacks.
And I think — this humbles us.
If even a virus, unseen to the naked eye, can remember its tribe,
Then why has humanity forgotten its own?
Communication is not the gift of the wise. It is the language of existence.
Giant viruses — some older than the earliest plants — have been found to carry signal pathways and communication systems similar to those used in bacteria and more complex organisms. These are not mere scripts of infection. They are codes of connection.
And I think, nature is showing us again —
Nothing evolves in isolation.
Even the so-called invaders form alliances.
Even the disruptors rely on dialogue.
Even destruction can be discussed, not just delivered.
So what is the lesson for us?
We build walls.
We isolate countries, communities, even ideas.
We believe independence is strength.
But I think — strength has always belonged to systems, to synergy, to shared intelligence.
These viruses — the very symbol of breakdown — are showing us the value of networked behavior.
If even viruses do not act alone,
Why do we?
This discovery doesn’t just change biology textbooks.
I think — it should change our behaviour.
Let us ask:
Do we cooperate with our surroundings, or merely consume them?
Do our technologies connect us more, or isolate us further?
Do we still know how to listen — to Earth, to each other, to ourselves?
Because if viruses can communicate through molecules…
Surely we, with minds and hearts, can communicate through compassion.
I believe every cell carries a sacred instruction: Connect, don’t conquer.
When I sit in meditation,
I feel that the universe doesn’t operate by dominance.
It operates by resonance — by invisible, quiet, respectful exchange.
Whether it is roots underground, stars in galaxies, or viruses in seawater —
Everything moves in patterns of response and relationship.
This is not just science.
I think this is scripture, written in atoms.
I think —
“Those who seem silent are often the ones speaking in the oldest tongues.”
Let us not dismiss the invisible.
Let us learn from it.
If the oldest viruses of Earth still remember how to reach out,
Then so can we.
Not to invade.
Not to dominate.
But to remind each other:
We were never meant to exist alone.
Prakruti Pranam.
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