The Last Refuge of the Disappearing Man Every age invents a ritual for offering men to the fire. Once it was the hunt, the spear, the plow. Now it is the spreadsheet, the mortgage, the quiet suffocation of a smile that hides the tremor in the jaw. We baptize boys in slogans—be a man, man up, take one for the team—until language itself becomes a weaponized lullaby.
Divine Individuation: Remembering the Old Grammar Through a Modern Mind
Love pretends to be a meeting of two people, but it is first a collision of two worlds. Every conversation, every memory, every “fact” you defend arrives pre-filtered through a private laboratory of genetics, culture, trauma, and language.
This intriguing exploration delves into the act of harvesting experiences from others without genuine care. Is there anything left to do with your true love that you haven’t done with a disposable person?
The Grandmother Contract: Love as Currency, Fear as Infrastructure In the hidden economy of African-American intimacy, love has rarely been a free-floating sentiment.
Insecure attachment is not a curse; it is a training algorithm—a survival-built method of manipulation that once kept you safe and now begs to be refactored into virtue.
Every culture instructs us to draw a map for love: choose wisely, marry well, manage risk, protect the heart. Yet Alfred Korzybski’s warning—that the map is never the territory—arrives like a thunderclap inside this most intimate geography.
Before governments claimed us, before lovers branded us, a woman’s nervous system set the first laws of power and love. The mother is not merely a person but a psychic empire—an archetype encoded in our biology and our economies.
Divorce can indeed serve as a threshold to self-realization, individuation, and even spiritual awakening—but only if one engages the rupture consciously. It is not divorce itself that transforms, but how one metabolizes the grief, the shadow, and the disillusionment.
Marriage functions not as the pinnacle of love but as capitalism’s most durable contract. Courts, tax codes, and religions sell the illusion of romance while secretly enforcing the logic of transaction. Marriage markets labor, lineage, and loyalty.
Marriage in America is not broken because Black people are broken. It is broken because the oxygen tank of wealth was never handed to Black America in the first place. If money is the silent air that keeps intimacy alive, then the epidemic of divorce and fractured families is not a cultural pathology—it is romantic asphyxiation engineered by a system that never wanted Black lungs to expand fully in the first place.
Are you housed in your body, in your love, in your God—or are you squatting in the ruins of your own heart, evicted nightly by fear? You can hold deeds to mansions, stocks, and coins, yet still be spiritually homeless. You can wear the finest shoes, yet carry the brokest heart.
A deeper examination of the risks associated with unhealed therapists, teachers, gurus, preachers, intimate partners, social media influencers, celebrities, coaches, mentors, and pastors when they lack the desire for self-realization, individuation, and the embodiment of their teachings is warranted.
Not reconciliation, not return, but resurrection! Resurrection of the self not addicted to trauma, resurrection of the bond not built on collusion, resurrection of a field of intimacy beyond projection, beyond compliance, beyond fear.
When someone announces, “I need to set a boundary,” is it always about safety—or can it be a velvet-gloved ultimatum, a way of disguising control as self-care?
An intriguing investigation delves into the willful act of betraying one’s lower self. This betrayal involves coping mechanisms and defense mechanisms created by the repressed shadow, which are employed as a means of achieving self-acceptance.
This intriguing exploration delves into the “Yessah Boss” relationship, where people-pleasing fawning and conforming individuals struggle with internal wounds and societal expectations, ultimately fostering superficial intimacy and connection.
A Polymathic Excavation of Relational Shadows Relational dynamics do not simply unfold in the soft light of candlelit dinners or whispered confessions; they erupt in the tectonic collisions between unresolved psychic fragments. The story of intimacy, when traced with Korzybski’s rigor, reveals not universal truths but sumbunall maps—partial, context-dependent, slippery.
The Alchemy of Connection: Reimagining Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Dynamics Human connections, defined by their complexity and depth, serve as both mirrors and vessels for healing, reflection, and transformation.
This intriguing exploration delves into the process of incorporating mindfulness into making relationships sacred!