Slower than Death ©️

They think speed is what kills. They think noise can be sharpened into a blade. But they have never seen the real weapon: silence stretched through time until it cuts deeper than steel.

I wait in the darkness, breathing once for every hundred heartbeats. The world moves — but it moves like a drunk old man, staggering through syrup.

I do not move faster than them. I move slower. I let their urgency exhaust itself, like fire burning through dry grass. I feel every second unfurl and crack apart, wide enough for me to slip through. Each breath from the guards becomes a thunderous tide. Each shuffle of a foot echoes like a mountain collapsing.

And me? I am the stillness at the heart of it. A ghost inside a collapsing world.

I lower my weight into the tatami floor. My toes barely kiss the surface — no sound, no signal. The lamp flickers once — a tremor in the air tells me the enemy shifted his weight the wrong way. He doesn’t even know he’s exposed. He doesn’t even know his fate was sealed the moment he chose to move fast.

I step. One movement — slow enough that even the dust hangs in respect.

When I breathe in, it’s not to steal oxygen. It’s to steal time.

Their voices drag through the corridors — long, slow, stupid. I already know what they will say before they say it. Their fears bleed into the air — and I read them like a hunter reads broken twigs in the forest.

I am not just inside their fortress. I am inside the seconds they thought belonged to them. I own this moment. I built it.

The target leans over a map, arguing with phantoms, thinking he still commands the living. He does not know that his last breath is already written.

I draw the blade. Not quickly. Deliberately. Slow enough that the whisper of steel doesn’t even disturb the candle flames.

I step into the room like a ghost stepping into a forgotten memory. He doesn’t turn. He doesn’t scream. He doesn’t react. Because I already pulled time two heartbeats ahead of him.

When the blade kisses his neck, it is not a clash of violence. It is a mercy. It is inevitability. It is the quiet closing of a door he never saw.

I wipe the blade clean in the same motion. Fold it into shadow. Step backwards — slower still — letting the seconds stitch themselves closed behind me, sealing all trace.

I vanish without running. I vanish without even moving fast enough to ripple the air.

Because I am not faster than them. I am beyond them.

I am the ghost that shaped their last moments.

I am Ghost Mode.

Blackhole Sun ©️

I didn’t change.

The world did.

They called it madness. They called it a breakdown. They didn’t understand.

I was successful.

Inside my brain, I spun a disc — slow at first, a lazy orbit — then faster, tighter, until it was carving into the fabric of everything around me.

Reality bent.

Time cracked.

I didn’t need a machine.

I became the machine.

One morning, I woke up under a radioactive sun.

The 1950s lived in my blood like molten steel.

I felt Bear Bryant standing inside my chest, whistling at his boys, calling the plays only I could hear.

It wasn’t nostalgia.

It wasn’t a dream.

It was real — more real than any plastic day this world tries to sell you now.

For an hour, maybe less, I walked in the full power of it.

I looked at the sky and it looked back at me.

I owned it.

It was my world.

Every inch of it.

Every atom sang in my voice.

Then the break came.

The disc spun so hard the grooves ripped open.

Visions bled through —

Father Bear lumbering through shattered trees,

the Ant Queen looming with her terrible crown,

the ghost of a girl I once loved brushing past my shoulder like smoke.

The world around me accelerated, cracked, peeled away like bad wallpaper.

They left me there at the boathouse — thought I was finished.

They thought I would collapse, beg for the old order to save me.

But I didn’t.

I stayed Bear Bryant.

I stayed radioactive.

I stayed carved from that hour of holy, burning sunlight.

Because I knew — in the marrow of my bones —

I had done it.

I had traveled time.

I had cracked the code.

I had crossed over without ever leaving my body.

They thought the cost would kill me.

They didn’t know it made me.

I am still here.

The disc still spins, deep in the dark of my mind, humming like an engine ready to fire.

The world can speed up, slow down, fall to pieces —

I’ll still be standing on my field, under my sun, whistling my plays, walking with God.

Because I didn’t change.

I changed the world.

And I’ll do it again if I have to.

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.