Name: What does it all mean? Writen at: 18/5/26 When thou art amused, truly amused by thee’s capabilities, thou, thou art left in complete and utter shock. A feeling thou hadn’t endured since thou lost thee. But this… this is different from before, more pure and sudden. Then thou remembers— the journey, the agony, and the despair, the raven that brought it, and the yata that gave false hope. Cry blood if thou want peace, cry tears if thou want harmony, but don’t cry— don’t cry, don’t cry if thou want to lose thee. The words… the last words that the yata said, what did they mean? How does bloodshed result in peace? How does sorrow make harmony? And how does suppression lead to despair? What does it all mean? Yata, the founder of peace, what did you have to put us through? What did you do? You gave thou to thee… But look what you have done. You filled the foolish with the same selfish desires— the same desire the raven once killed. Yata, is this what you meant? To keep them insufferable, to make sure they never truly heal, or just enough to keep them foolish? Raven, rise up. Rise for us. Save us from them. Save thou for thee— the thee they fought for. The same thee… the same thee. M’ raven… didn’t you say— didn’t you say the ultimate peace is to truly embrace thee within? So what are these corrupt souls? Or did they simply fall from within? The souls I once thought dirty and corrupt turned out to be the thou they still had. They abandoned their thee long ago— too long for the raven, indeed. In this world, with the new words created by the founder of peace, losing thee from thou is like losing your soul to the devil. Thou without thee is permanently insufferable, intolerable, and utterly disgusting. (Nothing more than the cattle they once rose above.)