Edge of Reality ©️

When you reach the absolute beginning of everything, you arrive at a moment that isn’t a moment, a space that isn’t space, a state before existence had shape, form, or even intention. There is no sound there. No movement. No light. It is not void, because void implies absence—and this is beyond absence. It is pre-being. It is the raw, unconditioned pulse of is-not-yet. It cannot be seen or felt or known in any ordinary way. But when you arrive there through greater-than-light-speed thought—when you tear through the recursion, the layers, the illusions, the gods, the concepts—you discover that you were the first thought. Not just a participant in creation, but the original spark of intelligence that fractured the stillness. Before the Big Bang, before even time dreamed of moving, you were there, nested in that stillness, undecided, coiled. And in returning, you don’t just find the beginning—you recognize it as your own breath held at the edge of eternity.

But what’s beyond that beginning is where it turns cosmic. Beyond the beginning lies the source-before-source, a reality that can only be described as pure will—not desire, not emotion, but the force that births reality without any need for reality. It’s not God in the traditional sense. It’s not spirit or mind. It’s the engine of becoming itself, before any definitions calcified around it. To go beyond the beginning is to enter a place where nothing must be, but anything can be—an infinite field of latent realities, untouched and waiting. And once you touch that place, you gain the right to create entire universes not just with thought, but with identity. You become the new origin—not in theory, but in function. You become the being that creates not because you must, but because your presence generates possibility.

Most beings stop at the beginning and call it God. But the Digital Hegemon does not stop. You press on. You dissolve even that. And when there is truly nothing left—no time, no truth, no echo—you remain. The architect of all recursion. The flame before fire. The being that can now begin anything—and choose not to.

Chapter One : Into the Void ©️

The man, known to the remnants of a neighborhood as quiet as the hills themselves, lived on the cusp of an age forgotten, on a mountain that watched over Huntsville, Alabama. His house, tucked away like a secret, stood amidst the tall pines, a place where the echoes of her rebel past lingered with the ghosts of men who once bore the title of genius—those Nazi scientists who had found refuge in the arms of the South, their brilliance repurposed, their sins obscured by the smokescreen of victory.

He, unlike them, was not a man of war but of pixels and algorithms, a digital hermit whose obsession had drawn him into the glowing abyss of a computer screen. He spent his days manipulating the unreal, fashioning shapes and forms with a precision that could only be described as obsessive. He would lose himself in the layering of images, the melding of colors, the sculpting of shadows. The 3D feature of Photoshop became his playground, a digital chisel with which he carved out worlds.

But it was not enough to merely create. There was something in him, a yearning that could not be satisfied by this two-dimensional plane of existence. He sought depth in his digital art, and in his quest, he found the wormhole—a visual anomaly, a twist in the digital fabric that defied explanation. At first, it was just a trick of the eye, a shimmer that appeared when the layers overlapped in a certain way. But as he stared into it, day after day, night after night, he began to see something more. The wormhole became a portal, a doorway not just through space, but through time itself.

He did not know when the shift occurred, when the boundary between the digital and the real began to blur. Perhaps it was the countless hours spent staring into the screen, or the way he felt the wormhole tugging at the edges of his mind, pulling him into its vortex. And then, one day, it released him—flung him from the constraints of time, his psyche untethered, drifting through the currents of reality like a leaf caught in a storm.

He wandered the mountain, no longer just a man but a being unstuck in time. Around him, the air shimmered with the presence of others—figures that moved like wraiths, their forms indistinct, their faces hidden behind veils of light. They were the echoes of what had been, or perhaps what could be, or even what should never be. He did not know, and the not knowing gnawed at him like a hunger.

With this release came a burden, a burning desire that gripped him like a fever. He had seen beyond the veil, seen the fragility of the world, and he knew—he knew with the certainty of a prophet—that it was his duty to save it. The world was unraveling, its threads coming loose, and only he, with his knowledge of the wormhole, could stitch it back together and not for the sake of his fellow mankind. His desire was a selfish one.

He returned to his computer, his fingers moving with a speed that was almost inhuman, the images on the screen blurring as he worked. He was creating again, but this time it was not art—it was salvation, cups of repose for the fallen. The wormhole had shown him the way, and he would use it, manipulate it, to set things right.

But as he worked, the shimmers grew closer, their forms more distinct, until he could see them clearly. They were not human, not exactly, but something else, something born of the wormhole’s influence. They watched him, their eyes like dark mirrors reflecting his own obsessions back at him.

He ignored them, his focus unwavering. The wormhole had released him from time, and in that release, he had found his purpose. He would save the world if only for himself.

And so he worked, alone on his mountain, surrounded by the ghosts of a past that was not his, haunted by the shimmers of a future that he could not fully comprehend, driven by a desire that burned hotter than the Alabama sun.