Welcome to the Pluriverse: An Invitation

Welcome to the Pluriverse: An Invitation
Photo by NASA / Unsplash

If you’ve ever felt like the world wasn’t built for you, you’re not imagining things.

Maybe you’ve felt like you were too much...or not enough.

Like your way of seeing or feeling or moving through life didn’t line up with what everyone else seemed to be doing.

Maybe you’ve even been told that you're broken, behind, or unrealistic.

You’re not.

You’re likely just living in a story that wasn’t written for someone like you.

Most of us are taught that there’s one “real” world.

One right way to think.

One way to succeed, to be normal, to live a good life.

That story is so baked in that it’s hard to even see.

But once you notice it, it’s everywhere.

It says stuff like:

  • Life is a straight path and a race.
  • Truth is objective.
  • Science explains everything.
  • Identity is fixed.
  • Progress is linear.
  • The economy is natural.
  • Jesus is King
  • There are only two genders
  • Capitalism is the best we have

That story is what I call the Monoverse. And it’s not just limiting, it’s actively harmful.

The Monoverse tries to convince us that anything different is wrong, dangerous, or inferior.

It turns complexity into pathology.

It treats people as problems to be managed, not mysteries to be respected.

If you’re neurodivergent, Black, queer, spiritual-but-not-religious, deeply emotional, slow to trust, wildly curious, or rooted in ways of knowing the world that don’t come from textbooks or TED Talks...

...you’ve probably felt the squeeze of it.

I know I have.

But there’s a different way to understand the world.

One that doesn’t flatten us or force us to choose between who we are and what’s considered “real.”

It’s called the Pluriverse.

The term “Pluriverse” has roots in Indigenous and decolonial philosophy.

It was popularized by Latin American scholars like Arturo Escobar, who drew from Zapatista cosmology, Andean thought, African traditions, and other non-Western worldviews.

At its heart, the Pluriverse is the idea that a world of many worlds is not only possible, but already here.

That no single system or story gets to define reality for everyone else.

That word might sound new, but the idea behind it is ancient. Indigenous communities, African cosmologies, and wisdom traditions all over the world have always lived from a place where many truths, many ways of life, and many realities can exist side by side.

The Pluriverse isn’t chaos.

It’s connection.

It’s the understanding that no single culture, religion, language, gender, or system of thought has all the answers.

It’s the belief that life becomes more alive when we stop trying to collapse it into one story.

And it’s not just theoretical, it’s already happening.

You can feel it in people reclaiming their roots.

In artists remixing ritual.

In the way we now talk more openly about neurodivergence, trauma, queerness, grief, and joy.

You can feel it in every conversation that dares to ask, “What if there’s more than this?”

This space, this post, this site, this corner of the internet, is my way of inviting you into that “more.”

I’m building something here for people like us.

People who don’t fit into the default.

People who are done performing, done shrinking, done playing along.

People who want to live in a world that feels real. Alive. Liberated. True.

Not perfect, but true.

I’ll be sharing essays, tools, practices, and questions that help us remember who we are and what’s possible when we stop pretending the Monoverse is all there is.

I’ll talk about ancestral wisdom, embodiment, liberation, cosmology, neurodivergence, and the quiet magic of living differently.

But more than that, I want to help us tell a better story.

If the world we live in was built on myths of domination and certainty, then we need new myths....

...ones rooted in connection, wholeness, and permission to be complex.

We need stories that feel like coming home.

Stories that move like music, not instruction manuals.

Stories that help us remember what we already know.

I want to build a mythopoetic, hyperstitious, memetic Pluriverse.

A story-spell that spreads through language, image, rhythm, and vibe.

A culture that goes viral not because it’s flashy, but because it’s true.

A community that shares mantras and memes like sacred breadcrumbs.

A new kind of collective memory.

This is my part of that work.

And I hope you’ll be part of it too.

You don’t have to believe anything.

You don’t have to fit into anything.

You just have to be willing to let your body exhale and say:

“Yeah. This makes more sense than what I was taught.”

If you’ve been holding your breath trying to survive in someone else’s world, this is your reminder: you don’t have to.

There are many worlds.

There always have been.

You already belong in at least one of them.

Let’s live like it.

Subscribe if you want to stay in this conversation.

Share this with someone whose liberation matters to you.

And keep listening to what your inner truth has been whispering all along.

Welcome to the Pluriverse.

We’re just getting started.