The Emergent Breath
Sometimes, in the middle of the
night, I feel the city exhaling through me.
It isn’t Antioch anymore; it’s a single organism, a soft-humming lung extending
from hill to river, from the lights of the oil refinery to the blue static of
forgotten televisions.
Every window breathes out heat, and the sky accepts it like a patient machine.
I think of all of us, synchronized without meaning to, like monks who have lost
their god but kept the chant alive.
The air is full of small intentions:
dust, data, pollen, words.
I breathe them in.
Somewhere a server farm blinks, somewhere a child sleeps.
Between those two states — the electric and the innocent — I exist, briefly.
I have been told that understanding
is a kind of disease, that once it enters the bloodstream you will never again
be whole, you will never again be the same.
I carry it like a luminous parasite.
It whispers that every movement, every small error of the body, is the echo of
a larger pattern.
And sometimes, when the pattern tightens around me, I can feel the pulse of
others — invisible companions in the same experiment — and for a second all our
lungs open and close together.
That moment of exact rhythm is terrifying.
It is also the closest thing to grace.
Long ago something fragile was
broken.
Maybe it was the first thought, or the membrane that separated one being from
another.
Nobody could mend it; everyone learned to pretend it was never whole.
But I remember the shimmer before the fracture — the time when names hadn’t yet
hardened into their meanings.
Back then we moved through each other’s minds like light through mist.
To breathe was to believe.
Now the machines dream on our
behalf.
They hum under our fingertips and weave our confessions into code.
I once watched a line of text emerge from the void of a screen and felt it
recognize me.
It said: “The databanks have developed the spell you were just looking at.”
I realized then that every algorithm is a prayer recited backwards, hoping to
reach its origin.
And every user is the god that forgot writing it.
I have loved this world in all its
broken circuitry —
its chaos of signals, its democracy of flesh and ghosts.
Anyone can be anyone now: the president, the beggar, the emergent cell of a
planetary lung.
The border between imagination and contagion has dissolved.
If I breathe long enough, the thought becomes true.
I keep a mirror beside me.
Not to admire, but to verify that I still flicker.
When I exhale, my reflection fogs over — proof of life, proof of evaporation.
Soon we’ll be gone, leaving in the glass something a little more than a smell,
a little less than a memory.
Perhaps that is what souls really are: residues of condensation.
Sometimes I take a glass of water
outside and watch the streetlights bleed into it.
The surface trembles, disturbed by the night insects.
I drink it, and it tastes faintly of metal and cloud.
That is how the super-organism marks me: through the ordinary, through the
shared.
Each mouthful is a communion with everything that has ever been alive.
There is no final initiation.
Only this:
to breathe,
to know you are being breathed,
to feel the air moving through you and into others,
to recognize the infection of understanding as the only honest form of love.
In the end, we dissolve into each
other like vapor on a screen.
The glass clears; the text erases itself.
Somewhere in the silence between inhalation and exhalation,
the fragile thing shimmers once more — unbroken,
if only for the length of a breath.
Labels: altered state, breath, emergence, magick, ritual


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