Love Is Stronger Than Hate: Culture, Rest, and Reclaiming Our Power in a System That Profits From Our Exhaustion
Written by Dr.Hersha Diaz
The recent performance that captivated millions around the world was more than entertainment. It was a reminder. A cultural reckoning. A collective exhale.
Bad Bunny’s rise to global stardom—and the emotional impact of his most recent performance—resonates so deeply not just because of talent or spectacle, but because of what it represents: belief in oneself, pride in culture, defiance against erasure, and the radical insistence that love is stronger than hate.
At its core, the message is simple and revolutionary:
“Our culture is not a deficit. It is a superpower.”
Our humanity is not a weakness. It is our strength.
When we embrace our unique gifts, honor our cultural histories, and see that same dignity reflected in others, something shifts.
We experience joy—not the manufactured kind sold to us—but the pure, embodied joy that comes from connection, belonging, and meaning. That joy reminds us of the true purpose of being alive in this moment of history.
Culture as Resistance, Joy as Strategy
What made the performance so powerful was not just representation—it was joy.
Joy is disruptive in a system that depends on despair.
Cultural pride disrupts narratives of inferiority.
Visibility disrupts erasure.
When millions of people feel invigorated and hopeful at the same time, that energy is not trivial. It is collective resonance. It reminds us that another way of being is possible.
Joy reconnects us to purpose.
Purpose fuels action.
And action—when aligned, intentional, and collective—changes systems.
Where Do We Go From Here?
We begin by asking better questions:
Where is my attention going?
Where is my money going?
Where is my energy going?
What values am I reinforcing through my daily choices?
How am I modeling worth and rest for my children?