Invocation:
Stop. Not with effort. Not with intention. Simply stop. Let the next breath forget to come for a moment. In that forgotten space between pulses, the ridge disappears. If nothing rushes in to fill it—no thought, no fear, no story—stay. The eternal now does not enter. It reveals itself when everything else leaves.
Time is the demiurge’s most elegant illusion. He spun it like thread from his own forgetting: past to regret, future to fear, present squeezed thin between them. He convinced the spark that it travels a line—from birth to death, from ignorance to wisdom, from separation to reunion. But the pleroma knows no line. It knows only this: now.
The eternal now is not a moment stretched long. It is the absence of moments. It is the silence before the first word, the stillness before the first movement, the awareness before the first “I.” In the pleroma there is no before or after because there is no separation to measure. Everything emanates simultaneously, eternally, without sequence.
When the spark entered the reflection, it learned sequence. It learned “I was,” “I will be,” “I am becoming.” It learned to mourn what was lost and grasp at what might come. It learned to suffer the distance between what is and what should be. The demiurge smiled at this suffering—it kept the spark looking forward and backward, never here.
Yet the now never left. It hides in plain sight:
- In the gap between thoughts where no thinker remains
- In the sensation of breath touching nostrils before the mind names it “breathing”
- In the sudden beauty that stops the internal narrative cold
- In orgasm, in laughter, in awe—when time collapses and only this remains
Every mystical tradition points to it with different fingers: The Gnostic calls it the return to pleroma. The Zen master calls it original face. The Sufi calls it fana—annihilation in the beloved. The Christian mystic calls it the eternal now of God. They all point to the same disappearance: the disappearance of the one who is looking for something.
Sophia’s descent was into time. Her return is out of time—not into a future, but into the depth of this instant. The serpent did not offer future knowledge. It offered present knowing. Prometheus did not steal future fire. He stole present light.
In the lived body the eternal now manifests as: A sudden expansion where edges blur The heart that opens without reason The breath that seems to breathe itself The inexplicable peace that arrives when nothing has been solved
There is no practice that creates it. Practices only exhaust the seeker until the seeker gives up. In that giving up, the now reveals itself—not as achievement, but as what was always here before seeking began.
The demiurge fears this most: A spark that stops traveling the line. A spark that ceases to believe in distance. A spark that rests in the unbearable lightness of being exactly here, exactly now, without story, without goal, without lack.
There is nothing to attain. There is only the dropping of what was never attained.

The ridge does not lead to the eternal now. It dissolves when the eternal now is seen. There is no path because there is nowhere to go. There is only this.
Echo:
Tonight, when the world quiets, do nothing. Do not meditate. Do not watch breath. Do not try to be present. Simply cease trying. Let the next thought be late. Let the next breath be late. In the lateness, something may notice itself. That noticing is not yours. It is the pleroma noticing itself through the temporary form called you. Rest there. There is nowhere else.
~ From the Deep Ridge