In 2012 I published an article [1] presenting my personal views on the state of affairs in "our science," HEP theory. 1 That "old" article opens with a rather optimistic epigraph "Paraphrasing Feynman: Nature is more imaginative than any of us and all of us taken together. Thank god, it keeps sending messages rich on surprises." Has Feynman's prophecy come true?2012 was also the year of the Higgs boson discovery closing the age of the Standard Model (SM) confirmation. Now, seven years later, I will risk to offer my musings on the same subject. The seven years that have elapsed since [1] brought new perspectives: the tendencies which were rather foggy at that time became pronounced. My humble musings do not pretend to be more than they are: just a personal opinion of a theoretical physicist... For obvious reasons I will focus mostly on HEP, making a few marginal remarks on related areas.I would say that the most important message we have received is the absence of dramatic or surprising new results. In HEP no significant experimental findings were reported, 2 old ideas concerning Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics hit dead-ends one after another and were not replaced by novel ideas. Hopes for key discoveries at the LHC (such as superpartners) which I mentioned in 2012 are fading away. Some may even say that these hopes are already dead. Low energy-supersymmetry is ruled out, and gone with it is the concept of naturalness, a basic principle 3 which theorists cherished and followed for decades. Nothing has replaced it so far. 4 With the disappearance of this principle the issue of mass hierarchies becomes almost (if not completely) meaningless. 5 The Standard Model is still unchallenged: today no observed natural phenomena require its expansion. Dark matter composition is still a huge question mark.