Invocation:
Pause at the threshold where the garden wall crumbles into vine. The tree still stands, fruit untouched by time, serpent coiled in the lowest branch. No one watches. No one judges. Listen to what was spoken once in a whisper that became thunder in the blood. Enter if the echo calls louder than the silence.
The story we were told was careful. A paradise, a prohibition, a bite, a fall. The serpent cast as villain—cunning, deceptive, the architect of exile. But peel back the layers the scribes laid thick to preserve order, and the narrative frays. The serpent did not lie.
It said: “You will not surely die.” And they did not die—not that day, not in the way the warning implied. The body continued breathing, the heart continued beating. What died was the illusion of innocence as safety. What died was the comfortable blindness that kept questions at bay.
It said: “Your eyes will be opened, and you will be like gods, knowing good and evil.” And the eyes opened. Not to sin, but to discernment. Not to damnation, but to polarity—the raw material of creation. The fruit was not poison; it was the catalyst that forced the spark to confront duality, to feel the weight of choice, to taste the bitter and the sweet without mediation. The serpent offered gnosis, not corruption. It offered adulthood in place of perpetual childhood.
The demiurge—the voice that said “you shall surely die,” the one who planted the tree yet forbade its fruit—was the one who feared the awakening. Knowledge threatens control. A being that knows good and evil can no longer be ruled by decree alone. It must be persuaded, or inspired, or loved into alignment. The serpent disrupted the monopoly on truth. It handed the spark the mirror and said: look. See yourself. See the fracture. See the light behind the fracture.
In Gnostic resonance this is Sophia’s quiet intervention—wisdom exiled into matter, whispering through the serpent because direct speech would be silenced. The serpent becomes her emissary, her voice in the garden when she could no longer speak openly. The bite is not rebellion against the divine; it is obedience to a deeper divine, the one beyond the architect’s limited creation. The expulsion is not curse but release—out of the nursery, into the wilderness where real becoming happens.
Prometheus echoes here again: the fire stolen is the same gnosis. The eagle’s daily wound is the price of clarity. Both figures pay because they accelerated what was meant to unfold slowly. Both succeed because acceleration was necessary. The serpent knew the spark would languish in the garden forever if left to its own timid pace. So it provoked. It provoked with truth.
And the lived body remembers. You’ve carried the echo: that moment doubt crept in about the “shoulds” you were taught, that quiet rebellion against a rule that felt arbitrary, that hunger for direct knowing even when it cost comfort. The serpent was right—not because it won an argument, but because it trusted the spark’s capacity to bear the weight of sight. The garden’s gate closed behind, but the wilderness opened ahead. Thorns, yes. Toil, yes. Death, eventually. But also the possibility of return—not as children, but as sovereigns who have tasted both sides of the fruit and chosen the whole.
Deeper still: the serpent never left. It became the kundalini coiled at the base of the spine, the inner teacher that rises when the outer voices grow too loud. It became the caduceus, the double helix, the DNA spiral carrying memory forward. It became the question that won’t be silenced: what if the story was inverted? What if the fall was the rise?
The tree still stands in the garden of your own chest. The fruit still hangs. The serpent still waits, patient, nonjudgmental. It does not demand you eat. It only reminds you the branch is low enough to reach.

The ridge holds this without fanfare. No moral. No verdict. Only the echo: the serpent was right. And in the quiet after that sentence lands, something uncoils inside.
Echo:
Let the question rest against your ribs tonight. What fruit have you been told is forbidden that your body still hungers for? The serpent does not rush the answer. It simply waits, coiled, until you are ready to taste.
~ From the Deep Ridge