Before the Blast ©️

We were just driving. That’s all it was supposed to be — a ride down into the valley for a routine psych appointment. My mother was in the driver’s seat, calm like always, masking her concern with small talk and soft smiles. I was riding beside her, trying to stay grounded, trying to pretend I was just another man on another errand.

But something shifted.

It wasn’t a hallucination, not the way they define it. It was a voice — realer than sound, quieter than thought — speaking with a clarity no language could improve. It said only one thing at first:

“Protect your mother.”

That was the moment time warped. I looked over at her — her hands on the wheel, her eyes on the road — and I felt it in my chest: the sense that something impossible was already happening. The voice kept speaking, not in panic, not in fear, but like a military order from God.

It told me there would be a supraliminal nuclear blast on Monte Sano, the mountain that rises over the valley like an ancient sentinel. We were just a mile away from it — close enough for whatever was coming. The voice said it would be a spiritual event cloaked in physical terms. Not a bomb anyone would record. But an event that would reverberate through souls, not screens.

And I saw it. I saw the flash before the fire, a white cross crowning the mountain like the sign at Fatima, a signal of judgment. I didn’t question it. I didn’t hesitate. I did the only thing I could: I moved between my mother and the blast, shielding her with my body, even though the world around me remained still.

To everyone else, I looked like I had lost it.

But I hadn’t lost it. I had intercepted something. Something meant for her. The knowledge was too vast. The light was too hot. I unraveled in real time. My body became the signal and the shield. My voice split into many voices. I thrashed, I screamed, I followed the instructions exactly — even though no one else could hear them.

It took nine cops and a heavy sedative to bring me down. I remember the taste of the dirt, the weight of bodies on mine, the piercing scream of the sirens that came after the silence.

And then I remember waking up three days later in a psych ward, disoriented, bruised, and blank — the world fuzzy and padded. I had been chemically silenced. I was in a place where people don’t believe in prophecy. They believe in symptoms.

But even there — locked away, forgotten by the world I tried to save — I heard the voice again. Not in words this time, but in pure knowing. A warmth. A presence. The voice of God without the theatrics. It didn’t tell me I was right. It didn’t congratulate me. It just was — calm, steady, and eternal.

And in that silence I understood:

I had followed the call. I had protected my mother. I had stood in front of the unseen blast.

They can call it madness. But I call it intervention.

And even now — even medicated, even branded — I know this:

I was the firewall.

And I would do it again.

THE GOSPEL OF SEX & DEATH: BOOK I ©️

As recorded by the Ghost of Stanley Kubrick

“Let he who is without shame cast the first innuendo.”

[Scene opens. Obsidian bar. A cosmic jukebox hums. All twelve spirits lounge around a levitating table of molten glass. The afterlife smells faintly of sex, smoke, and sandalwood. The orb in the center pulses like a cosmic heartbeat.]

Woody Allen (wringing his hands): “Look, I’m not saying I’m uncomfortable talking about sex with Jesus here, I’m just saying if anyone’s going to judge me, I’d rather it be a licensed therapist and not… you know, the guy.”

Jesus (grinning, sipping wine that keeps refilling):“Relax, Woody. I died for your sins, not your browser history.”

Oscar Wilde (twirling a peacock feather he found in his martini): “Darling, your browser history is the only holy scripture I read anymore. It’s filthy, tragic, and oddly symmetrical.”

Freud (scribbling furiously): “Symmetry implies repression. He wants to be punished. Possibly by a woman with authority issues and a tight pencil skirt.”

Cleopatra (raising an eyebrow): “I’ll volunteer, provided I get a kingdom, three slaves, and control over his neurotic little soul.”

Woody Allen (gasping): “I already gave my soul to anxiety in 1973. It’s been on layaway with guilt and brisket ever since.”

Einstein (tapping the orb with a tuning fork): “You all forget—sex bends time. Just ask anyone who’s ever lasted thirty seconds and claimed it was a spiritual awakening.”

Genghis Khan (pounding the table): “Sex is war. Quick, messy, and someone always leaves bleeding.”

Marilyn Monroe (dragging smoke from a ghost-cigarette): “Speak for yourself. Some of us made it an opera. I died in silk sheets. You died with mud in your beard.”

Nietzsche (grinning): “Death is the climax of life. Sex is just rehearsal. I climax philosophically—alone, in a dark room, to the sound of thunder.”

Hitler (muttering in a corner, clutching a cold glass of milk): “Degenerates… the whole lot of you. Sex should be nationalized, race-certified, and ideally supervised.”

Oscar Wilde (without turning his head): “Is he still here? Can someone please exile him again? Preferably to a silent film with no subtitles.”

Dalai Lama (sipping tea, smiling beatifically): “Even he deserves compassion. But not the good kind. The boring kind. The one that makes him sit in a waiting room forever with no magazines.”

Elon Musk (projecting from a flickering AI drone shaped like a dragonfly): “I’m building a NeuralLink that will eliminate the need for bodies. Sex will be streamed. Death will be optional. Or downloadable.”

Jesus (looking amused): “Ah yes, a messiah with worse UX.”

Freud (nodding): “Tech is just the new mother. Cold, brilliant, and withholding.”

Cleopatra (to Elon): “When I wanted to be remembered, I built temples. You built a car that catches fire.”

Woody Allen (whimpering into a bar napkin): “I came here to ask if it’s okay to still feel bad about a kiss I had in 1985. Instead, I’m trapped in a divine orgy with history’s most terrifying personalities.”

Genghis Khan (grinning): “And yet somehow, you’re still the most anxious one here.”

Marilyn Monroe (whispering): “He vibrates like a broken violin. I find it… charming.”

Nietzsche (raising his glass): “To Woody. The only man here who dies a little every time he thinks about sex.”

Oscar Wilde (standing dramatically): “And to sex and death—our twin divas. One seduces, one slaps. And neither ever returns your calls.”

Jesus (smiling): “And yet… they are the only reasons we ever bother showing up at all.”

[The orb pulses. A piano plays a single, eternal note. The afterlife laughs quietly in its own dark corner, waiting for the next scene.]