The fear of being left out

In the film American Psycho (2000), Christian Bale plays an executive whose identity seems reduced to his business card. Paper, typography, texture—his entire persona summed up in material details. Belonging to the company matters more than his own inner worth. Behind the façade: a bottomless void.

Today, twenty-five years later, the threat is even more radical. It’s no longer just about being excluded from a company—it’s about being pushed out of the human game altogether. Replaced by artificial intelligences that don’t feel, don’t live, don’t truly compete… they simply replace. When personal quality is no longer enough, the human being is left exposed, face-to-face with their most fragile condition: a living being in a world that doesn’t need them. The collapse can be brutal if one hasn’t cultivated an inner strength—a strength capable of letting go and rebuilding from the essential.

It’s natural to seek security in material things, in status, even in wealth. But nothing truly calms the fear of loss—except unconditional love for the present moment, free from illusion. Some of us manage to face it in small doses. Others suffer—sometimes for a lifetime.

Twenty years ago, I went through my own losses. From that experience, Pointfulness was born: a lucid vision of life. An invitation to live with genuine joy, stripped of artificial layers.
It’s not a business. It’s not a job.
It’s a deep availability to talk about what really matters.
And to prepare, together, for what lies ahead.