Venezuela: Abundant Nature, Poor Lives When Predictability Collapses

There Is a Country Where Nature Is Abundant, but People Are Poor
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There Is a Country Where Nature Is Abundant, but People Are Poor

Venezuela, where abundance remains—and the connection to daily life slips.

Strong sunlight and a deep sky over Venezuela — a vertical hero image of abundance and distance
Under strong sunlight and a deep sky, abundance remains while life drifts into the shade. © Rainletters Map

There is a sentence that does not want to become an explanation. It wants to remain as a scene.

There Is a Country Where Nature Is Abundant, but People Are Poor

When this sentence first came to mind,

I hoped it would not sound like an explanation.

There were already enough explanations,

and numbers and graphs were always there.

Instead, I wanted this sentence to remain as a scene.

A scene where abundant nature and poor lives

exist in the same place

without negating each other.

Why This Landscape Came to Mind First

The landscape of Venezuela satisfies that condition too easily.

The sun is strong, the sky is deep.

Forests are not far from the city,

and birds and wind still keep their places.

(Because it lies close to the equator,

the range of temperature change throughout the year is relatively small,

and instead, whether it rains or not

changes the expression of the seasons.) ← Anchor ①

The Moment People Start Saying the Same Thing

People seeing this country for the first time

usually say something similar.

“It’s so beautiful—why is it so hard to live?”

That question already contains a misalignment.

The assumption that beauty should guarantee a good life,

the expectation that if nature is abundant,

human life must follow.

But reality did not follow that expectation.

This Was Never a Place Called “Lacking”

Venezuela is not a country lacking resources.

Oil, natural gas, minerals, water.

On the map, this country has always been called “potential.”

It was noticed not because it lacked,

but because it overflowed.

(The fact that its proven oil reserves are mentioned

among the top in the world

already frames this place

not as “scarcity,” but as “excess.”) ← Anchor ②

When the Center of Conversation Shifted

At some point,

nature disappeared from people’s words,

and only stories of daily life remained.

Whether groceries could be bought today,

whether medicine could be found tomorrow,

whether it was safe to send a child to school.

The questions became smaller,

and the answers more uncertain.

The Sense That Shook Before Poverty

Here, poverty was not simply a matter of income.

What wavered first, before survival itself,

was the sense of being able to anticipate.

The belief that if I earn today,

tomorrow will be a little better.

The calculation that today’s discomfort

will lead to future stability.

When that chain broke,

people felt not that they had become poor,

but that they had become isolated.

(When prices begin to shift

not yearly but perceptually day by day,

plans in people’s minds turn

from numbers into fear.) ← Anchor ③

Nature Did Not Stop During That Time

Nature continued to flow unchanged.

Rivers did not dry up,

forests renewed themselves.

Birds that moved into the gaps of the city

found new balance

before humans did.

The Distance That Became Clearer

That is why, in this country,

the gap between nature and humans becomes clearer.

Nature is abundant,

but people cannot reach that abundance.

The Many Explanations Around This Scene

Some explain this gap through politics,

some through sanctions,

some as the result of failed policies.

Those explanations are not wrong.

But they cannot fully explain

the temperature of this scene.

A State Closer to Separation Than Lack

Because poverty here was closer to separation than to lack.

Nature and life, resources and daily existence,

numbers and lived sensation

began moving in different directions.

From that moment, people began preparing to leave,

even while knowing

that this land was still abundant.

(The fact that population movement

in the range of “millions” has been recorded

over the past decade or so

shows how many people here

responded to the problem not with “protest,”

but with “departure.”) ← Anchor ④

What Leaving Came to Mean

Leaving was not about abandoning nature.

It was closer to realizing

that nature could no longer

protect life.

The Question That Remains

So this sentence becomes a question.

Nature remains the same,

but where did people’s lives fall away?

This is not a question with an immediate answer.

What is clear, however,

is that what became poor in this country

was not the land,

but the sense that once connected land and life.

Looking at the Scene Again

Nature is still abundant.

That is why it becomes even clearer

how far people’s lives have drifted.

One Sentence Left After Writing

What became poor was not nature,

but the sense that connected nature and life.

Quiet Marker
Coordinate: RLMap / Venezuela · Abundance–Life Gap
Status: Nature-Abundant · Life-Separated · Sense-Collapse
Notice: Original composition © Rainletters Map
Where This Text Stands
South America / Venezuela
Abundant nature · Separation of life · Collapse of sense
Three Lines That Hold the Thought
Nature: kept its flow
Resources: still remain
Human life: lost its connection
How This Text Should Be Read
This text does not organize the causes of poverty.
It follows the sensation of the gap
that formed between nature and life.
The Image That Remains After Reading
Under strong sunlight and a deep sky,
nature is abundant,
but life has been pushed into the shade.

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