seen from China
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seen from Malaysia
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"One has either to take people as they are, or leave them as they are. One cannot change them, one can merely disturb their balance."
—Franz Kafka, from a letter to Felicia Bauer.
Disjunction
Level 5 Abjuration
With a flick of your hand, threads of power snap and unravel. Magic sputters, blessings die, and even divine light falters for a heartbeat—leaving only silence where faith and fire once burned.
💬 If you could cut the world’s magic for just a moment, when would you do it?
Art by Midjourney
trouble, n. and v.
The noun and verb senses of this word arose simultaneously ca. 1200 from the same origin language: Old French. The verb is from OF trubler, a metathesis of turbler, "to disturb, muddle, or mix". The noun is from OF truble, "disturbance, turmoil", which is itself derived from trubler as above.
The Old French is derived from Latin turbulare, "to make turbulent, to agitate", which itself is from the Latin adjective turbidus, meaning "muddy, clouded, full of confusion". The Latin is also the source of Modern English turbid and turbulent/turbulence, as well as disturb, perturb, and turbine. From Old French truble, tribulation is also derived through the Anglo-French intermediary tribul.
Come in at your own risk.
If it comes, let it come. If it goes, it's ok, let it go. Let things come and go. Stay calm, don't let anything disturb your peace, and carry on.
Germany Kent