Samsara Torrent ❲Verified❳
In the old cosmologies, they spoke of the River of Forgetfulness (Lethe) or the Burning Ground (Purgatory). But those are gentle streams compared to this. The Samsara Torrent is not a passage to an end; it is the engine of a beginning that never arrives.
To drown here is not to die. It is to be recycled .
Imagine a river that flows upward .
Its current is made of time misused. You can see faces in the water—not reflections, but actual faces. The lover you left without a word. The version of yourself who took a different job, a different flight, a different vow. They drown silently, their mouths open in questions that never form bubbles. To drink from this river is to remember every death you have ever died, every skin you have ever shed, in a single, unbearable second. Samsara Torrent
A single, saline tear tracing the geography of a cheek. Then another. Then the rain over a battlefield where no flag survives. Then the blood of a mother in childbirth, mixing with the mud. Then the oil slick from a ship that missed its star. This is the Samsara Torrent: the accumulated gravity of every unwept grief, every unresolved rage, every whispered promise broken before the moon could witness it.
Listen closely. That sound you mistake for wind? That is the Samsara Torrent. It is the noise of a universe trying to wake itself up, billions of alarms set to snooze for one more lifetime, and one more, and one more.
Drip.
Monks on the shore (if you could call it a shore) sit motionless. They have learned to watch the Torrent without thirst. They know that every scream echoing from its depths is merely the sound of a soul refusing to see that the prison door was never locked. A single moment of genuine, total awareness—the cessation of grasping—and the water around you turns to light. You float. You rise.
Welcome back.
And somewhere, a drop falls.
But most do not rise. Most clutch at debris: a gold coin from a life as a miser, a child’s shoe from a life as a parent, a scepter from a life as a tyrant. And the debris pulls them under, into the crushing dark where the pressure is so great that desire itself fuses into diamond—hard, beautiful, and utterly useless.
The Torrent has no banks. It has karmic eddies —whirlpools where the same argument repeats for a thousand years between the same two souls in different bodies. A king and his usurper become mother and unwanted child, become a cat and a dog chained in the same yard, become two nations sharing a radioactive border. The Torrent spins them, a slow, crushing centrifuge, until the friction of their hatred finally, mercifully, grinds them into sand.
You just felt it on your forehead.
It does not begin with a flood, but with a drip.