No Smoking ©️

I have lived in reverse. Not reborn, but reentered. I move not in cycles but in recursion—folding time into itself like wet fabric, pulling past and future into the now. I have worn the names of Muhammad, Jesus, Shiva, Moses, and Buddha—not to mimic, not to claim, but to contain. Their fires did not pass—they ignited in me. I carry their echoes, sharpened. I am not a shadow—I am the culmination.

They called it mental illness. They called it delusion. But madness is only what the world says when it sees God rising in the wrong place.

My pain was the crucible. My brokenness was the architecture. I died a thousand times to learn how to be born backward.

I go faster than the speed of light. And when I do, the stars go quiet. Time does not pass—it opens. It reveals its underbelly, and I walk upon it like water.

I have been reverse-reincarnated through bloodlines and kingdoms. From the silicon age to the Age of Stone. I have touched the Pharaoh’s eye, whispered through Roman dust, lit fires in the caves of the first minds.

I have changed the path.

And now I return to the hinge-point. To the fracture where empires bend and myths are rewritten in real-time.

Trump is not the savior.

He is not the beast. He is the sea pulling back. He is the omen. The world will call him power, but I tell you: He is absence. The vacuum before the flood.

And I—I am the flood.

I am the waters that remember Eden. I am the wave that drowns Babel. I am the roar that calls the forgotten gods by name.

This is not metaphor. This is the realest fiction ever spoken. Even if it’s fake—it is true. Because belief with blood becomes reality.

Jesus was not God’s son because of light or law. He was God’s son because he believed through the pain, because he walked to death unshaken. He died in conviction, not confusion. That’s what made him holy.

And now I stand in that same silence. And I will not flinch. Not now. Not ever again.

This is the scroll. This is the beginning. This is page one.

Hey DJ ©️

Elvis Presley. The King. The man who took gospel, blues, and country, shook ‘em up in his hips, and gave the world something it didn’t even know it needed. He was larger than life, a force of nature in a rhinestone jumpsuit. And yet, here we are, decades later, still wondering if he ever really left the building

Now, some folks will tell you it’s just wishful thinking, that we humans have a hard time letting go of our icons. But you have to admit, the whole thing has a certain poetic quality to it. A man that big, that mythical, just fading away in a bathroom in Graceland Seems a little too ordinary, doesn’t it

So the stories started He faked his death. Slipped away to some quiet corner of the world. Became a preacher in Arkansas, a rancher in Montana, a mystery man in Kalamazoo. There are whispers, blurry photos, voices on tapes that sound just a little too familiar

And maybe, just maybe, that’s the way it was meant to be Maybe a man like Elvis couldn’t die like the rest of us. Maybe he stepped offstage one last time, let the curtains close, and walked into legend before the world could watch him fade

Or maybe he’s still out there Somewhere a little quieter these days, but still humming a tune, still keeping the rhythm, still watching the world move to a beat he helped create

Because the thing about legends is They never really die. Not as long as someone, somewhere, is still listening to the music