The Thirteenth Hour
The Thirteenth Hour is a mixed collection of sincere exploration and satirical insight into the subjects of reality and time.
- The Hermetic View of Time
What if time isn't what we've been told? What if the clock is only half the story? In the tradition of Hermeticism—one of the few philosophies bold enough to call illusion by its name—time splits in two. This is a glimpse into that split, and a tribute to the seekers who choose truth over dogma, even when truth has no final form.
- There's No Time Like the Present
We speak of the present as if we live in it—but what if the present has no home in time at all? This is a quiet inquiry into time, reality, and the possibility that we are timeless beings that exist outside of time itself. As usual, no answers promised. Only the fold itself remains.
- Lucky Number 13
You’ve been told to fear the number 13—to skip it, avoid it, erase it—but what if that fear was never yours to begin with? What if 13 wasn’t cursed, but sacred? Ancient civilizations saw it as a symbol of life, power, and cosmic order. So why did we flip the script? Who stood to gain by turning reverence into dread? This isn’t just numerology—it’s narrative control. And it’s time to take the number back.
- A Waste of Time
We often speak of time as something to manage, spend, or waste—as if its value were obvious and measurable. But beneath that certainty lies a deeper, more complicated question about fate, choice, and meaning. This piece explores that tension through reflection and parable, not to offer a final answer, but to examine whether time itself can even be wasted.
- Is Daylight Saving Time a Government Conspiracy?
Nobody asked for it, nobody wants it. Yet somehow, DST has endured for over a hundred years, like a government app that can't be uninstalled. Official reasons are nowhere to be found. Studies are inconclusive. What’s really going on? Is the Vatican behind it again?
- February 29: Leap of Deception
Every four years, an invisible hand reaches into the calendar and drops in a day that doesn’t belong. Most people barely notice it. Fewer still ask why it exists. But February 29 isn’t just a harmless quirk of timekeeping—it’s a glitch, a patch, a red flag hiding in plain sight. We’re told it’s science. We’re told it’s math. But what if it’s something else entirely? In a world where nothing is as it seems, even time itself might be part of the illusion. This is a closer look at the day that shouldn’t exist.
- The Devil’s Hour, The Sage’s Hour
There’s something different about 3:00 AM. It’s not just late—it’s other. It’s when your phone finally goes quiet, the hum of the world dims, and a strange stillness creeps in. Some say it’s the hour of ghosts and demons. Others claim it’s the perfect moment to touch the divine. Depending on where—and who—you are, it’s either cursed or sacred, dreaded or revered. This piece is a journey through that paradox, where fear and enlightenment share a timeslot. So stay awake a little longer. We’re about to step into the hour where everything—and nothing—happens.
- Against the Flow of Time: 3 Allegories of Caution
They say time waits for no one—but what if you could slip through its fingers? Long before sci-fi gave us time machines and paradoxes, ancient myths whispered of travelers who defied time’s grip—and paid the price. In three haunting allegories from India, Japan, and Ireland, kings, fishermen, and warriors pass through enchanted realms where time flows strange. Their journeys are not triumphs, but warnings. Step into their stories and see what happens when mortals move against the flow of time.
- Déjà Vu: Reality’s Greatest Hits
Ever get that weird sense that life’s just hitting the replay button? Like you’re starring in your own personal rerun, but with no remote control? That’s déjà vu—a little glitch in the matrix that makes the ordinary feel strangely familiar. Whether it’s your brain playing tricks, your soul sending postcards from another lifetime, or reality sneaking in a remix, déjà vu reminds us that time—and memory—are way more tangled than we think.
- Sacred Seconds: The Numerology of Time
You glance at the clock—11:11. You pause. It feels like more than coincidence, like time is trying to say something. This instinct isn’t new. Long before clocks or calendars, humans saw numbers in time not just as measurements, but as messages. Why do certain dates feel fated? Why have numbers like 7, 12, and 60 echoed through the centuries? From prehistoric carvings to digital synchronicities, this is the story of how we’ve looked to time not just to track life, but to understand it—a story of patterns, symbols, and our enduring urge to find meaning in the math of the moment.