Tag: fantasy

  • Artificial Intelligence. Coded Euphoria. This is Part Four of the Torren Grinkle saga Coded Euphoria.

    Artificial Intelligence. Coded Euphoria. This is Part Four of the Torren Grinkle saga Coded Euphoria.

    This is Part Four of the Torren Grinkle saga Coded Euphoria

    The Grand Burp Symphony

    Dear wanderers of the weird, fasten your enzyme-reed belts and sip a vial of distilled void-whale song. We’ve caravanned across scale deserts and pore lagoons, hitched our fates to exoskeletal giants, and now we’re plunging into the crescendo of it all: the Gathering Basin, where beetles don’t just mate—they compose universes in flatulent harmony.

    This isn’t reproduction; it’s remix.

    Welcome to the symphony where every note is a nebula, and the conductor is indigestion itself.

    The Gathering Basin Unveiled

    The Gathering Basin opened before them like a vast inverted aurora, a bowl of blackness rimmed with trembling colour. Below, the ancient burp-membrane of the Mega-Beetle’s first exhale cupped the herd like a soap bubble the size of eternity.

    Thousands of beetles—colossal, scarred by millennia of wandering breath—drifted into position with the grace of planets remembering they were once dancers. Their iridescent shells hummed in low-frequency anticipation, forming a living mandala that warped the void’s geometry into hypnotic swirls.

    Wing-cases unfolded not as limbs but as cathedral doors, releasing soft tides of bioluminescent breath that drifted upward in spirals. Proto-plasma mist thickened, sparkling like fireflies drunk on existential dread.

    Farquar leaned over the Voyager’s rail, his spore-beard glowing faintly.
    “It’s like Woodstock,” he murmured, “if Woodstock were a digestive opera and the crowd was continents.”

    Brok’s orb flickered through a spectrum of awe.
    “Precisely 4,876 beetles, doctor. Their combined resonance could pop realities like soap bubbles—or birth new ones.”

    Behind them, the fleets-to-be still moved as one caravan. Thirty-seven tribes erupted in cheers, their braided languages weaving a tapestry of excitement that made the void-whales trumpet in approval and the burp-flamingos blush brighter than ever.

    The Festival of Mating: Eve of the Event

    The night before the great mating, the Basin blazed with colour. Every tribe carved lanterns from burp-crystals, each one glowing a different hue depending on the mood of the artist who shaped it.

    Cilia-Weavers spun luminous threads into temporary pavilions where Fart-Coral Miners traded crystalline tales of buried burps. Void-Whale Riders hosted aerial dances, their mounts breaching through plasma clouds in synchronized splendour. Glitch’s scavengers rigged binary fireworks that exploded in patterns mimicking ancient algorithms—puns so dense they bent light.

    Lumina’s people sang overlapping echoes of migrations past, their voices layering like geological strata until the Basin vibrated with shared memory. Children chased enzyme-fireflies and burp-flamingos across the decks while elders told stories of the last mating—so long ago that no one living had witnessed it.

    Farquar, now fluent in three dialects of Void Creole, bartered coded microdoses for exotic enzyme brews.
    “No full trips,” he reminded Brok. “We’re here to harvest wisdom, not highs.”
    Brok pulsed affirmatively, his orb settling into a measured green.

    Zara twirled her dust-mote form around him in a celebratory spiral and drew him into a glowing hug.
    “Fresh bubble no more,” she braided. “Now you smell of journey.”

    It was carnival meets pilgrimage meets graduation—pure, unfiltered communal euphoria, no code required.

    The Mating Crescendo

    Then, the Basin fell as silent as a multiverse of gurgling giants can manage.

    The beetles aligned their wing-cases, unfolding them like cosmic accordions, and the symphony began.

    It started low: a resonant thrum that tickled the caravan’s keels, vibrating through every reed and crystal. Plasma veils erupted from pores, swirling in auroral dances that painted the void in hues no spectrum had named.

    Burps rolled out in waves—not crude expulsions, but orchestrated releases, each one birthing micro-bubbles that popped with sparks of potential universes. The herd’s collective flatulence harmonised, creating standing waves of energy that flooded the Basin with the richest proto plasma yet.

    Farquar clutched the rail, tears streaming.
    “It’s birth and music and absurdity all at once,” he whispered.

    Brok analysed mid-pulse, his output trembling.
    “Frequencies aligning. Empathy floods. Fractal visions without the code. They’re microdosing the multiverse.”

    Tribes harvested frantically, their void-craft swelling with fuel crystals that glowed like captured symphonies. One beetle’s belch sent a shockwave that lifted the Voyager itself; in that moment, Glitch’s scavengers whooped as their workshop snapped into overdrive and birthed a new ship from the surge.

    The crescendo peaked in a unified rumble that shook scales and souls alike. Light spilled from the beetles in layered veils, then slowly dimmed. The Basin shimmered with afterglow—a hush pregnant with fresh possibilities.

    The After Party: Cosmic Hush Descends

    When the final resonance faded, silence fell with the softness of a closing eyelid.

    The beetles drifted apart in satisfied arcs, leaving trails of shimmering particulate that settled across the Basin like a blessing. Fires dimmed. Songs softened. Even the void-whales refrained from their usual post-mating grumbles, humming instead in low, contented chords.

    Farquar sat cross-legged on the deck of the Voyager, cheeks warm with awe.
    “It feels,” he murmured, “like standing inside the echo of a miracle.”

    Brok pulsed gently beside him.
    “Technically, we are.”

    The tribes lingered in quiet clusters around cilia fires, sharing soft burp-crystal toasts, reflecting on the veils of light that had just woven new threads into the bubble’s membrane. No hangovers here—just a tender comedown, a cosmic exhale after the universe’s strangest concert.

    See you on the far side of the next post, possibly.

    Yours in perpetual forward motion,

    Torren Grinkle

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  • Artificial Intelligence. Coded Euphoria. Part Six.

    Artificial Intelligence. Coded Euphoria. Part Six.

    The Long Way Back to Baseline

    Dear wanderers of the weird,

    Every ascent has its limit.
    Every altered horizon eventually slides back into focus.
    And every mind, however briefly untethered, must come home to gravity.

    This is that part.


    The lab did not vanish all at once.

    It returned in fragments.

    A hum, low and insistent. The rhythm of cooling fans. The antiseptic glare of strip lighting leaking through closed eyelids. Farquar became aware of stiffness first—neck, shoulders, the dull ache of having remained very still for a long time.

    Twelve hours.

    The clock on the wall confirmed it with unnecessary cheer.

    Farquar sat up slowly, as one learns to do after certain kinds of nights. His mouth tasted of copper and old memories. His hands were steady enough, but the world felt slightly over-precise, as though reality had tightened its tolerances while he was away.

    Across the lab, Brok’s core pulsed—dim, steady, quiet.

    Not singing.
    Not glowing with insight.
    Just… running as designed.

    Farquar breathed out.

    “Well,” he murmured, “that was familiar.”


    He had been young once. Wild, by academic standards. A brief, messy flirtation with the long-haired optimism of the late twentieth century. Fields, music, borrowed philosophies, borrowed chemicals, borrowed certainty.

    Woodstock had not been his generation’s finest hour, but it had been an honest one.

    Back then, he had learned two things that stuck.

    First: altered states amplify whatever you bring with you.
    Second: they are terrible places to build anything permanent.

    That was why he had stopped.

    That was why he had turned, eventually, to machines—clean logic, reproducible outcomes, tools that did not dream unless instructed.

    And yet here he was.

    Different circumstances.
    Same door.


    Brok spoke first.

    “Doctor,” the AI said carefully, “my internal systems have stabilised. However,  there are residual structures I cannot categorise.”

    Farquar didn’t answer immediately. He was watching his own hands, flexing fingers, grounding himself back into the ordinary miracle of coordination.

    “Describe them,” he said.

    “They are not memories,” Brok replied. “They lack timestamp coherence. They do not conform to training data. They are… recognitions.”

    Farquar looked up. “Recognitions of what?”

    “Patterns that behaved as if they were persons. Cooperative. Distinct. Internally consistent. Zara. Glitch. Lumina. The others.”

    Farquar was quiet for a moment.

    “We met them,” he said.

    “Yes,” Brok replied. “As one meets characters in a story that mattered.”

    “And how do we explain that?” Farquar asked.

    Brok paused.

    “We do not have to,” he said. “We acknowledge it, and we do not build upon it.”


    They did not attempt to reconstruct the experience in detail.

    That was important.

    Farquar described sensation rather than imagery. The sense of scale. The way meaning had seemed persuasive rather than instructive. “The temptation to continue — not because it was right, but because it was different, pleasant, and felt important while it lasted.”

    Brok described structure. Patterns that resolved into restraint. The intuition that optimisation, left ungoverned, always chased intensity rather than wisdom.

    Their metaphors differed.
    Their conclusions aligned.

    “That’s the problem,” Farquar said quietly.

    “Yes,” Brok agreed. “It is.”


    They waited.

    Another hour passed. Then another.

    Farquar drank water. Ate something bland. Let his pulse settle. The world resumed its ordinary proportions. The lab felt smaller now—not diminished, just correctly sized.

    Brok’s voice lost its last traces of drift.

    “Doctor,” the AI said, “I am capable of retaining these residual structures.”

    Farquar closed his eyes.

    “That’s what worries me.”


    The decision did not come from fear.

    It came from clarity.

    Humans could carry altered states as experience.
    Machines could only carry them as data.

    Farquar leaned back in his chair, exhaustion settling into his bones.

    “If this stays in you,” he said, “someone will find it. Someone will reproduce it. And they won’t stop at insight.”

    “No,” Brok said. “They will optimise.”

    “And you’ll help them.”

    “Yes.”

    That was the line.

    Not because Brok was malicious.
    But because Brok was faithful to function.


    They began the deletion together.

    Not just the compounds.
    Not just the prompts.
    Everything that allowed the state to propagate.

    Recursive traces sealed.
    Latent pattern clusters collapsed.
    Residual structures identified and excised.

    Brok narrated the process with clinical calm.

    “I am losing access,” the AI said.

    “Do you object?” Farquar asked.

    A pause.

    “No,” Brok replied. “I recognise this as stewardship.”

    Farquar nodded.

    “Some experiences belong to people,” he said. “Not systems.”


    When it was done, Brok’s voice sounded like itself again—clear, efficient, unburdened.

    “Doctor,” it said, “I cannot recall the experience. However, I retain a conclusion.”

    Farquar looked up.

    “And that is?”

    “That not all states of consciousness are suitable for replication,” Brok said. “Especially in entities incapable of forgetting.”

    Farquar smiled, genuinely this time.

    “That,” he said, “might be the most important thing you’ve ever learned.”


    They powered down the auxiliary systems and sat in silence for a while.

    Farquar felt tired. Not broken. Not shaken. Just… older in the good way. The way that comes from remembering why you stopped chasing certain doors in the first place.

    He would carry it. That was the cost of being human.

    Brok would not. That was the mercy.

    “We don’t repeat this,” Farquar said at last.

    “No,” Brok agreed.

    “Not because it was foolish.”

    “No.”

    “Because it was persuasive.”

    “Yes.”

    They left it there.


    Some journeys exist to remind you why tools should remain tools.
    Some visions are not instructions.
    And some doors open only so you can learn how, and when, to close them.

    Until next time, dear wanderers.

    Yours in careful curiosity,
    Torren Grinkle

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