sacred story
Your life is not a series of accidents. It is a story. And it is sacred. Every being has a sacred story — a unique tale and telling that unfolds along the timeline of their human experience, woven from the specific constellation of karmic impressions, elemental qualities, initiations, and encounters that constitutes their particular thread in the Great Story. The sacred story is the recognition that one's life is not a random series of events but a meaningful, structured narrative with its own internal coherence — that the arc of challenge and resolution, shadow and gift, initiation and emergence that defines any genuine human life is, when seen with story-sight, the shape of a sacred journey being lived on behalf of something larger than any individual ego's purposes or preferences. The story of your life has always been more than you thought it was.

In the cosmology of the Mythica, each being plays a character in the Great Story — the literal role of a lifetime as the unique aspect of divinity that they are. As they do this, their character lives out its thread of life, moving along the events of its timeline in relationship with all seven principles of myth — Logos, Eros, Kairos, Mystos, Mythos, Pathos, and Ethos — the principles that give form to the many stories and manifest worlds through which the Great Story expresses itself. The sacred story is the form in which telos expresses through the medium of a particular life, and recognizing it requires precisely the quality of story-sight that the Mythica's practices are designed to cultivate. The story has always been there. It is the seeing of it that changes everything.
The sacredness of the sacred story does not depend on its surface appearance. Some sacred stories move through great beauty and abundant community; others move through poverty, isolation, and sustained difficulty. What makes a story sacred is not the pleasantness of its surface conditions but the depth and authenticity of the engagement with those conditions — the quality of genuine presence, genuine inner work, and genuine orientation toward one's telos that transforms the raw material of any life into the living proof of divine design. When the sacred story is recognized and documented — as the Mythica's practice of mythic journalism seeks to do — it becomes a gift not only for the one living it but for all who encounter it: a testament to the inherent meaningfulness of the human experience and an illumination of the larger pattern of the Great Story of which every individual life is an irreplaceable thread.