Throughout history, complex ideas have often been translated into stories. Characters were created to represent forces that were difficult to explain—giving shape to something abstract so it could be understood. Over time, those stories became fixed, and what was once symbolic began to be taken literally.


As awareness expands, the meaning behind those stories begins to shift. Instead of looking outward for explanations, attention turns inward. Traits once assigned to external figures—creation, destruction, clarity, distortion—start to be recognized within human experience itself. The narrative doesn’t disappear, but its role changes.


This shift doesn’t remove the value of the story—it deepens it. What was once seen as separate becomes something to understand more directly. And from that perspective, the focus moves away from assigning roles and toward recognizing patterns, both within the world and within oneself.