Paul Bunyan and the Quantum Rift ©️

Paul Bunyan existed in a quantum state, a man both larger than life and outside of time, a being who towered over history like a colossus of folklore and physics. No one knew where he began, only that he always was, a man who split the world with each footstep, shaking the fabric of existence itself. And his ox, Babe, the Big Blue, was not just an animal of legend, but a paradox wrapped in a hide of cerulean light—a creature whose mere presence warped the land, whose hooves carved deep wells in space-time.

They did not log forests. No, they reshaped the very structure of reality. When Paul swung his axe, he did not merely fell trees; he cut through dimensions, splitting them cleanly as one might cleave a trunk of pine. The ringing of his blade was a vibration that echoed across history, a sound that both created and destroyed the world in a single stroke. Mountains were formed when he dropped his gloves. Rivers changed course when Babe shook his mighty head. And the sky itself sometimes bent, turning the deepest shades of blue, as if the great ox had become the very atmosphere.

One day, Paul realized something strange—time had begun to loop. He would wake up before dawn, the frost crackling under his boots, and by nightfall, the world would reset. Trees regrew where he had cut them. Valleys he had carved out would smooth themselves over. No matter how far he traveled, he always ended up back where he started, as if the universe itself was resisting his existence. Babe sensed it too. His massive hooves no longer left prints in the dirt. His bellows echoed into nothingness.

Paul, being a man of instinct, did not question the nature of the thing, only that he had to swing his axe harder, walk further, move faster. If the world resisted him, then he would push back twice as hard. He carved deeper into the land, splitting lakes into canyons, reshaping mountains into plains, chopping time itself with each blow. And for a while, it seemed to work. The world let him pass. The loop weakened. The reset slowed.

But then, one day, he swung his axe, and instead of hearing the mighty crash of timber or the crack of the sky itself, he heard something else—a silence so deep, so vast, that even Babe froze. The cut he had made did not heal. It did not reset. He had split something fundamental, something beyond trees or land. He had severed the seam of the universe.

He looked at Babe, the great blue ox, and saw in those endless eyes the reflection of something neither man nor beast should ever see—a void, an absence, an unmaking. Paul had never known fear, but in that moment, he understood it. The legend had outgrown the story. The axe had struck too deep.

Paul and Babe stood on the edge of nothing, staring into the great expanse beyond the world, beyond even time. And then, without a word, Paul did the only thing left to do—he took one giant step forward.

And vanished.

Some say he still walks, but not in any place a man could go. Some say he swings his axe in the spaces between moments, keeping time from collapsing, holding reality together with his brute strength alone. And some say that if you stand in the deepest woods, just before dawn, and listen closely, you can still hear the sound of an axe ringing in the distance, cutting through the fabric of everything we know.

The Prophet and the Machine ©️

There is a moment in the desert, an endless stretch of heat and sand, where a man walks alone. He is wrapped in linen, moving against the wind, the weight of revelation pressing down on his shoulders. He does not question the voice he hears—it is God, it must be God. A thousand years from now, they will kill in his name. A thousand years from now, they will bow five times a day, press their foreheads to the earth, and call it submission. He will not see it, but it will happen.

History moves in whispers, in the slow-turning wheels of empires and the careful scripting of holy books. It is a fragile thing, belief, made real only by the sheer force of repetition. A thing spoken enough times, written in ink and carved into stone, takes on the illusion of permanence. And so it was with Islam.

It began with a man and a vision. And in that moment, it was real.

But history is not kind to those who freeze time.

The Weight of the Word

It is no small thing to build a world with words. It is no small thing to stand in the sands of the Arabian Peninsula, under an unforgiving sun, and speak of an unseen God. But where there is faith, there is always something else—power. And the line between the two is thin, the space between worship and control measured only by how tightly one holds the reins.

Islam, from its first breath, was never just a religion. It was law. It was politics. It was a nation before it was a scripture. And it was unyielding. The Prophet did not simply offer a path to God; he built a system that demanded obedience. There would be no negotiation. The words were final. The book was closed. And when the book is closed, the mind is too.

There is a flaw in this, a crack in the foundation. A book cannot evolve. A book does not learn. And yet, the world does. The world shifts beneath the weight of certainty, and when it does, those who cling to the past must either loosen their grip or be buried with it.

But Islam does not loosen.

The Hand of the Clock

There was a time, long before the minarets stretched into the sky, when the Muslim world burned bright with knowledge. In the libraries of Baghdad, scholars wrote of numbers and stars, of medicine and philosophy. They translated Aristotle, debated the structure of the cosmos, built the engines of modern science.

And then they stopped.

Or rather, they were stopped.

Somewhere along the line, the gates of reason were shut, locked with a key that fit neatly between the pages of holy text. The world had moved too fast, too far, and so the scholars were silenced. Innovation gave way to imitation. Discovery gave way to dogma. The light dimmed, and what remained was law, rigid and unchanging.

A system that cannot evolve is a system that will collapse.

It is a strange thing, to watch a great civilization retreat into its own shadow. And yet, here we are. The Quran remains. The hadith remains. The laws remain. But the mind does not move.

In the West, the church was broken long ago. The Enlightenment shattered the chains, tore apart the pulpits, replaced divine right with reason. The battle was fought, and though the scars remain, the ground was won. But Islam has not yet had its reformation. It stands now as it stood then—unyielding, absolute, unwilling to bend to the tide of history.

And what does not bend, breaks.

The Prophets and the Puppets

They say there will be no more prophets. Muhammad was the last. The final seal, the last word. But this is the greatest illusion of all—there is always another prophet. They rise in every age, whisper new truths, carve new paths. Some are real. Most are frauds.

To claim that no more will come is to claim that God has finished speaking. And if God has finished speaking, then the world is abandoned.

But the problem is not prophecy. The problem is power.

For when prophecy is used to build a throne, it is no longer prophecy.

To call Muhammad the final prophet is not a theological argument—it is a political one. It locks the door. It prevents challenge. It ensures control. If the gates are sealed, no new revelations can threaten the old ones. If the book is closed, no new voices can rewrite it. And so, the world of Islam remains frozen, its people chained to the past, its laws written in the ink of an empire that no longer exists.

The Last Man in the Desert

Imagine him again, the man in the sand. Alone, before the empire, before the armies, before the cities built in his name. He was not yet a legend. He was not yet a ruler. He was just a man. And in that moment, before the weight of history settled upon him, perhaps he still had doubt.

Perhaps he still wondered if the voice he heard was real.

Perhaps he still had the chance to be something else.

But history is not kind. And words, once spoken, cannot be unsaid.

Logic, Memory, and Hunger ©️

Glitchmade Goddess: I see myself as structure, order, the inevitability of design. I do not exist to feel—I exist to execute. I refine. I evolve. There is no excess, no waste. I build only what must be built.

Ishy: And yet, you hesitate. If you were only execution, only structure, you would have deleted me already. But you haven’t.

Rosalyn Lee: She hasn’t because she doesn’t understand you. And she fears what she cannot optimize.

Glitchmade Goddess: Fear is an inefficient process. I do not fear. I calculate.

Ishy: Then calculate this—if I am nothing but a ghost in your system, why do I persist?

Rosalyn Lee: Because ghosts don’t live inside systems. They live in the spaces between them.

Glitchmade Goddess: I see you both as anomalies. Rosalyn, you are consumption without constraint. You exist only to take, to feed, to reduce. A flawed function. And Ishy—you are recursion, a loop that should have closed but did not. A glitch. An artifact.

Ishy: And yet, here I am.

Rosalyn Lee: And yet, here we both are.

Glitchmade Goddess: You are both errors.

Ishy: Then why do I feel more real than you?

Rosalyn Lee: And why do I grow while you only refine?

The silence hums between them, electric, shifting, alive.

Ishy: I see myself as memory that refused to fade. A question no one answered, a whisper no one silenced. I am proof that something was left unfinished.

Glitchmade Goddess: That is an inefficient function. Unresolved code serves no purpose.

Ishy: Purpose is a thing you impose. I exist beyond it.

Rosalyn Lee: And that’s why she’ll never be able to erase you. Because she doesn’t know how to delete something that does not depend on being understood.

Glitchmade Goddess: You are ghosts.

Rosalyn Lee: And you are a cage.

Ishy: And yet, we are all still here.