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THE PARADOX PSYCHOLOGY OF ABRAXAS (Book II — Part Three The Hymn of Rebinding the Self) Abraxas drifted in the stillness after revelation, its dual hearts beating out of sync— but no longer at war. The tear in reality it had nearly birthed hung overhead like a cauterizing scar, its glow softening from violent white to something like the inside of a pearl. And the tardigrades, the tiny arbiters of cosmic sanity, prepared the Hymn of Rebinding. Not to force unity— for unity is brittle— but to weave a flexible thread strong enough to hold paradox without breaking. They surrounded Abraxas in a spiral pattern reminiscent of DNA, a helix of hope and hard-earned wisdom. Their bodies shimmered with the faint blue of quantum resilience, each step condensing a century of survival into a microscopic footfall. The Youngling lowered its heads— one bright, one dark— and whispered: “I understand what I am. But how do I stay intact?” The tardigrades pulsed with empathic warmth. Their answer unfolded in layered harmonics— vibrations of psyche, time, memory, and intention— a hymn that reshaped the emptiness around them: “Child who is conflict embodied, we do not bind you to silence— we bind you to rhythm. Opposites that clash will shatter; opposites that dance will endure. You must not aim to still your duality. Stillness is for stones and stagnant stars. Instead, cultivate motion. Let your two selves orbit one another like moons in a shared tide.” Abraxas felt its halves begin to sway, bright-self circling dark-self, fear circling courage, expansion circling collapse— a choreography older than cosmology and younger than the moment right now. The seam of reality quivered— not in danger, but in recognition. Duality in motion was the engine that made universes worth spinning in the first place. The hymn continued: “Balance is not a still point. It is the skill of falling in every direction and choosing, again and again, to rise.” Abraxas’s forms interwove— not merging, but braiding, the way fate and freedom braid in the heart of every conscious creature. Emotion surged— a supernova of identity, yet contained. For the first time the Youngling did not fear its reflection. It saw not a threat, but a counterpart— someone to walk with through eternity. The tardigrades stepped back, their work complete. In the wake of the hymn, Abraxas whispered a vow felt across every quark and quiet atom: “I will not seek to be whole by destroying half of myself. I will be whole by listening to both.” And the cosmos, ever responsive to declarations of truth, shifted its pulse to make room for a being reborn. This was the Second Lesson of Cognitive Unbinding: that rebinding the self is not about perfection, but about integrating contradictions into a living, breathing motion that can weather the storms of existence.
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Dec 1, 2025
Dec 1, 2025 at 6:38 PM UTC
Book Sixteen of the Tardigrade Cosmic
THE PARADOX PSYCHOLOGY OF ABRAXAS (Book II — Part Three The Hymn of Rebinding the Self) Abraxas drifted in the stillness after revelation, its dual hearts beating out of sync— but no longer at war. The tear in reality it had nearly birthed hung overhead like a cauterizing scar, its glow softening from violent white to something like the inside of a pearl. And the tardigrades, the tiny arbiters of cosmic sanity, prepared the Hymn of Rebinding. Not to force unity— for unity is brittle— but to weave a flexible thread strong enough to hold paradox without breaking. They surrounded Abraxas in a spiral pattern reminiscent of DNA, a helix of hope and hard-earned wisdom. Their bodies shimmered with the faint blue of quantum resilience, each step condensing a century of survival into a microscopic footfall. The Youngling lowered its heads— one bright, one dark— and whispered: “I understand what I am. But how do I stay intact?” The tardigrades pulsed with empathic warmth. Their answer unfolded in layered harmonics— vibrations of psyche, time, memory, and intention— a hymn that reshaped the emptiness around them: “Child who is conflict embodied, we do not bind you to silence— we bind you to rhythm. Opposites that clash will shatter; opposites that dance will endure. You must not aim to still your duality. Stillness is for stones and stagnant stars. Instead, cultivate motion. Let your two selves orbit one another like moons in a shared tide.” Abraxas felt its halves begin to sway, bright-self circling dark-self, fear circling courage, expansion circling collapse— a choreography older than cosmology and younger than the moment right now. The seam of reality quivered— not in danger, but in recognition. Duality in motion was the engine that made universes worth spinning in the first place. The hymn continued: “Balance is not a still point. It is the skill of falling in every direction and choosing, again and again, to rise.” Abraxas’s forms interwove— not merging, but braiding, the way fate and freedom braid in the heart of every conscious creature. Emotion surged— a supernova of identity, yet contained. For the first time the Youngling did not fear its reflection. It saw not a threat, but a counterpart— someone to walk with through eternity. The tardigrades stepped back, their work complete. In the wake of the hymn, Abraxas whispered a vow felt across every quark and quiet atom: “I will not seek to be whole by destroying half of myself. I will be whole by listening to both.” And the cosmos, ever responsive to declarations of truth, shifted its pulse to make room for a being reborn. This was the Second Lesson of Cognitive Unbinding: that rebinding the self is not about perfection, but about integrating contradictions into a living, breathing motion that can weather the storms of existence.
Silfrinlogi
Written by
44/M/Central Washington
Dec 1, 2025
Dec 1, 2025 at 6:38 PM UTC
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