taste me, as the food and drink Alice found almost said. she was cast unto a stormshorn sunderedsea. you too will fall beneath my waves in time.


profile pic by moiwool (nonbinary color edit by me)


the reason why the moon is such an appealing locus of spirituality for me is... well, it's largely because of the reputation she has. everyone knows her, and yet so few people really understand her. understanding of her, in pop culture, is equated to outsideness, otherness, in tropes like the 'moon cult'.

in our culture, she's relegated to the night. the existence of dayishmoons is known, but minimized. our video games and our books always portray her as completely opposite the sun. always rising at dusk and setting at dawn. no matter what shape she takes. she's always kept in the margins of our daydwelling lives.

it feels good to embrace being Outside. being Insane. to become a Lunatic. not just reluctantly marked or scarred by Outsideness. but taking it into my self, wholly, unabashedly. seeing how bright she is. how the gibbous eveningmoon begins to glow, otherworldly, as dusk approaches, as the great blue has only just begun to fade. how the crescent eveningmoon sits just above the skin of our little world, whether high in eveningseason or low in morningseason. how she seems to float, just as the twilight does. how you're so happy to see her again in her New form, after she had Oldened and gone. the morning is the end for her. it is a beginning too.



i feel like a religion (ideally) is nothing but decades-centuries-millennia-aeons of accumulated play. little things that were silly at first but nonetheless felt Significant. letting yourself see meaning in something that might be meaningless. building upon that, along and along and along, until your people are engaged in a mutually-built, incredibly significant, multifaceted game of how to see the world. and it's the kind of game that you never quite stop playing.