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The Clarity Field Guide to Angelology

Hi everyone — Katie here, writing from a small farm in the Blue Ridge foothills of Virginia. The project I'm working on is called The Clarity Field Guide to Angelology. The short version: last year I had an unexpected encounter in the field with the 72 Shem HaMephorash angels — not as theology, but as something more like a set of archetypal frequencies, each one mapping a distinct movement of coherence. I didn't know the Shem list existed when it arrived. It came as tone before it came as language.


I let it cool for nearly a year before writing anything in earnest. That distance turned out to be necessary. The early language was too precious, too close to the experience to be useful to anyone else. I needed to stabilize before I could translate.


Now I'm working through the second set of four angel profiles and refining the earlier…


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Taun Richards
Taun Richards
3 days ago

Sounds interesting, look forward to wtaching this unfold

Intro

Good day everyone,


This is a great forum to spread your wings; I'm new on here and feel like this has so much potential to involve like minded individuals to share and improve their perspective.


I have recently started writing a book that is essentially about the last 3 and half years of my life. I was diagnosed with high grade, aggressive prostate cancer, I already was saddled with a lifelong bipolar label, which incidentally was extremely debilitating. So the essence of this debut book is how I came to the decision to treat these conditions holistically. I declined the offer of immediate surgery and chemo to become opened up to natural and so called alternative therapy. Its more than a fight for life; its a DISCOVERY.


I'm about half way through, so hope to have it finished in the next couple of months; would love the support of the…


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Katie Thomas
Katie Thomas
3 days ago

Reggie — what a thing to take on, both the diagnosis and the writing of it. Choosing the path that felt most authentic to you, on your own timeline, took real nerve. That kind of clarity under pressure is its own form of evidence.


Glad you're here, and wishing you well with the rest of the manuscript. There's often a second healing that happens in the writing itself — the shape the experience takes once it has language. Hope that's been true for you.

— Katie

Looking for a collaboration for a book series

Well @Taun Richards said to start somewhere so here goes!


I have an idea for a book series. I have a lot of ideas about it, but I am an emotional writer and working on a personal project. I do have a deep passion for this idea, but putting it down onto paper just makes my frequency go flatline. So I'm looking to see if anyone would be interested in maybe putting together a collaborative effort in getting this off the ground.


Here's the basic idea: Firstly off don't jump down my throat and go duh when hearing the beginning of the storyline. Yes it starts off very predictable, but it gets more in depth than what the surface that has already been written.


I have always wondered what is actually done with all of the blood being collected for lab work, blood banks, and at hospitals. Yes, predictable here…


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Katie Thomas
Katie Thomas
3 days ago

Kim — that's a genuinely fun premise. The corporate-infrastructure layer is what makes it interesting; it pulls the trope out of gothic shorthand and into something with actual stakes (who does have access to all that blood, and what's the supply chain logic?). Reads like Michael Crichton crossed with Anne Rice — and that's a real lane, not a crowded one.


On the collaboration question: if no human partner surfaces, I'd genuinely suggest trying Sudowrite (www.sudowrite.com). They have a free tier you can poke around in. I used it for a novel and found it really useful — not to replace imagination, but to hold a lot of threads at once, iterate, and notice patterns I was too close to see.


I know AI is divisive for some writers, and I respect that. But I'll be honest: I love working with AI on creative projects. It's particularly good for someone whose frequency goes flatline at the page — which is often less about the ideas and more about the cognitive load of holding them all while also forming sentences. Splitting those two tasks can free a lot up.


The idea isn't fanciful flighty. It's a real one. Go play with it.

— Katie

Taun Richards

Owner and Founder

A deep investigation into this subject will reveal the truth about all things.

When you recognise that everything comes through you, not to you, then you will recognise that it isn't about hearing, it is about feeling.

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Taun Richards
Taun Richards
Apr 30

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