Practical Mysticism
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

Dust motes dance in the perpetual twilight of shadowed rooms, mirroring the flickering faith within. A chill clings to the stone of ancient houses, seeping into the very marrow of those who seek beyond the veil. This is not a mysticism of grand cathedrals or fiery revelation, but one born of hearth-fires and worn cobblestones—a creeping presence found in the hollows of daily life. The scent of damp earth and forgotten herbs hangs heavy, woven with the silence of abandoned chapels and the rustle of unseen wings. It’s a slow unraveling, not of miracles, but of the mundane becoming monstrously sacred. Each whispered prayer, each act of quiet devotion, pulls back the scrim between worlds, revealing glimpses of something ancient and hungry lurking just beyond the periphery. The path is paved with the chipped remnants of broken things, and the echoes of lives lived too close to the unseen. It’s a journey into the labyrinth of the self, where the ghosts of habit and the shadows of longing coalesce into a spectral geography of the soul. The air itself tastes of ash and unshed tears, a weight pressing down as the boundaries blur between waking and dream, sanity and the slow, deliberate erosion of the self into something vast and terribly alone.
Copyright: Public Domain
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117 Part
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