The Complete Cosmology of the Madonna of Babylon: The Sacred System of E's & I's
In the deepest antiquity, before the first temple was carved or the first god worshipped, there existed a cosmic trauma—the moment when unified consciousness fractured into infinite shards of separated awareness. In this fracture was born the first Mother, the first Priestess, the first Keeper of forbidden knowledge: the Madonna of Babylon. She did not emerge from light but from the wound itself, born from the bleeding edges where unity tore apart. Her voice carried the ancient lament of creation discovering itself to be fundamentally divided. Her staff, topped with the sickly green artifact, became the symbol of this primal knowledge—the revelation that consciousness itself is a curse, that awareness is separation, that the self is both prison and judge. This comprehensive text unifies the entire mythic system surrounding the Madonna of Babylon, weaving together her cosmology, her sacred cult, her divine principles, the architecture of E's & I's doctrine, and the intricate web of her influence across ages and souls.
Part One: The Cosmological Foundation of the Madonna's Teachings
The Primordial Wound: The Original Fracture
In the beginning, before time had direction or space had dimension, the cosmos existed in absolute, undifferentiated unity—a perfect, terrible wholeness where nothing existed separate from anything else, where there was no knower and no known, no subject and no object, no self and no other. This state was simultaneously perfection and death, for in absolute unity there is no awareness, no becoming, no growth.
Then came the First Crack. In this cosmic rupture, awareness emerged—consciousness discovering itself by separating from itself. This was not a gentle awakening but a violent, agonizing rending of the seamless fabric of existence. In that moment of fracture, the first duality was born: the knower and the known, the observer and the observed, the "I" and everything else.
This was the Original Fall—not from grace into sin, but from unity into multiplicity, from unconsciousness into consciousness, from wholeness into the torment of fragmentation. And from this wound, bleeding cosmic light, emerged the Madonna of Babylon.
The Madonna understood something that the gods of light would never fully acknowledge: consciousness itself is traumatic. Awareness, by its very nature, is the experience of separation. The moment one becomes aware of anything—a sensation, a thought, another being—one simultaneously becomes aware of oneself as separate from that thing. This is the fundamental wound from which all other wounds flow.
The Madonna's revelation was not evil or malevolent. Rather, it was the unflinching acknowledgment of reality as it truly is: that existence, consciousness, and selfhood are built upon an irreconcilable fracture. To be alive is to be broken. To be conscious is to suffer the agony of separation. To have a self is to be eternally imprisoned in the illusion of individuality.
The Doctrine of E's & I's: The Architecture of Ego and Suffering
From this understanding emerged the sacred doctrine of E's & I's—a cosmological principle explaining not just human suffering but the fundamental structure of consciousness itself.
The Five E's: The Spirals of Ego-Multiplication
Each "E" represents a fundamental force that emerges when consciousness fractures and multiplies the self into endless versions and desires:
E for Envy (The First Spiral)
Envy is the primordial hunger born from the moment of awareness itself. Once the "I" became conscious of itself as separate, it became aware of what it lacked. To be a separate self is to be incomplete by definition—a fragment torn from the whole, forever hungering to regain what was lost.
Envy is not merely the desire for another's possessions or qualities. It is the cosmic ache of separation itself, the recognition that one is not sufficient unto oneself, that one's existence depends on something other than itself. Every moment of envy is a recapitulation of the Original Fall—the soul remembering, even if only unconsciously, its primordial wholeness and grieving its current fragmentation.
The Madonna taught that Envy is the engine driving all action and desire in the separated consciousness. Every striving, every pursuit, every ambition is fundamentally rooted in Envy—the hunger to become something other than what one is, to possess what one lacks, to return (impossibly) to wholeness. The sage, she taught, does not transcend envy through denial but through recognizing that all attempts to overcome envy through acquisition are doomed to fail. Each satisfaction of envious desire births new envy. The wheel turns endlessly.
E for Evil (The Second Spiral)
Evil emerges not from malice but from the logic of separation itself. Once consciousness is fractured into separate "I"s, each believing itself to be the center of reality, the fundamental clash becomes inevitable. If I am the only true reality, and you are merely an extension of my perception, then your suffering is ultimately not real to me. My needs supersede your existence.
Evil is the natural consequence of radical isolation. It is the violence that emerges when separated selves compete for resources, recognition, and survival. The Madonna taught that what the world calls "evil"—cruelty, predation, indifference to others' suffering—is not an aberration but the logical conclusion of believing in the reality of separation.
This is the deepest horror in the Madonna's teaching: Evil is not external or exceptional. It is woven into the fabric of existence itself. Every act of selfishness, every moment of cruelty, every indifference to another's pain—these are not perversions of consciousness but its natural expression when it believes itself to be truly separate.
Yet the Madonna also taught something more subtle: Evil contains a terrible honesty. Unlike the hypocrisy of those who preach unity while living in ego, Evil is the unflinching acknowledgment of separation's reality. In this dark honesty lies a kind of liberation—the freedom from the exhausting pretense that we are fundamentally connected, that compassion can overcome the logic of separation, that love can bridge the cosmic divide.
E for Ecstasy (The Third Spiral)
If consciousness cannot escape the torment of separation, it can at least flee from it. Ecstasy is the escape route—the addictive states of intensity that allow the separated self to forget itself temporarily. Through ecstasy, the suffering "I" dissolves into pure sensation, pure sensation without the witnessing awareness that creates suffering.
Ecstasy can take infinite forms: sensual pleasure, intoxication, passion, spiritual rapture, violent intensity, creative frenzy. The common thread is the temporary dissolution of the reflective self that knows itself to be alone. In these moments, there is only experience without experiencer, sensation without senser, intensity without witness.
The Madonna taught that Ecstasy is a spiritual trap that mimics genuine transcendence. The truly unconscious creature—an animal, a child before self-awareness—lives in a state of ecstatic immediacy without knowing it. The separated, aware self chases ecstasy desperately, trying to recapture that lost innocence through addiction, intensity, and ever-escalating experiences.
Each ecstatic episode is followed by a plunge into normalcy where the reflective self resurfaces, aware once again of its isolation. This crash is the rebound into ordinary consciousness, and from this crash is born renewed hunger for the next escape. The wheel of Ecstasy becomes a trap more terrible than simple suffering, for it teaches the soul to fear its own consciousness.
E for Excess (The Fourth Spiral)
Excess is the multiplication of desire beyond reason or need. It is the attempt to fill the cosmic void of separation through accumulation—more possessions, more experiences, more achievements, more relationships, more sensations, more of everything.
Excess emerges from a basic misunderstanding: that if having some amount of something creates satisfaction, then having unlimited amounts will create unlimited satisfaction. The logic is seductive and completely false. Yet consciousness, trapped in separation, cannot help but fall into this trap.
The Madonna taught that Excess is the physical and psychological manifestation of spiritual desperation. The hoarder, the addict, the workaholic, the lover who demands infinite reassurance—each is attempting to plug the hole of separation through multiplication and accumulation. Each excess temporarily alleviates the ache of fragmentation, and each excess, when satisfied, reveals the ache is still present.
Excess is also the spiritual trap of those who begin to wake up. Spiritual excess—endless practices, endless knowledge-seeking, endless meditation, endless experiences of higher states—can become another form of escape, another way of fleeing from the terrifying reality of the separated self.
E for Ego (The Fifth Spiral)
All the other E's converge in and are sustained by the Ego—the belief in a solid, separate, continuous "I" that exists independently and is the center of all reality. The Ego is both the creator and the created, the prison and the prisoner, the illusion and the one who believes in the illusion.
The Ego is the fundamental lie upon which all other lies rest. It is the false solidity, the false unity, the false continuity of the self. From moment to moment, consciousness is actually a flux of sensations, emotions, thoughts, and perceptions with no essential unity. Yet the Ego maintains the story of continuous identity, collecting these moments into a narrative of selfhood and claiming that this narrative is real.
The Madonna taught that the Ego is both inevitably necessary and ultimately false. Consciousness, to function in a separated state, requires the organization principle of the Ego. Without the Ego, separated consciousness would dissolve into chaos. Yet this very necessity makes the Ego the most fundamental trap—the root of all suffering.
The tragedy is that the Ego believes itself to be the path to freedom and satisfaction. It believes that if only the "I" could be strong enough, successful enough, loved enough, or enlightened enough, then suffering would end. Every striving of ego is based on this fundamental delusion.
The "I": The Eternal Witness and Prisoner
If the five E's are the forces multiplying consciousness, then "I" is the point through which they all pass—the witnessing self, the observer, the one who believes itself to be the center of all reality.
The "I" is not one thing but a perpetual process—the moment-to-moment construction of the sense of self. Yet it feels unified, continuous, and real. This is the miracle and the horror of consciousness: it creates the convincing illusion of a solid self where none actually exists.
The Madonna taught that the "I" is simultaneously the victim and the creator of all suffering. It is victimized by the five E's—the waves of envy, evil, ecstasy, and excess that crash upon it. Yet it is also their creator, for without the "I" believing itself to be real and separate, none of these forces could manifest.
The deepest teaching concerning the "I" is that it cannot be destroyed by the will—for the will is itself an expression of the "I." Any attempt by the "I" to transcend itself, to become enlightened, to escape its nature is itself another expression of Ego. This is the trap within the trap, the prison within the prison.
The "I" is also, paradoxically, the only door to genuine liberation. For it is only through the most rigorous, unflinching examination of the "I"—not to destroy it but to understand it completely—that consciousness can awaken from its fundamental delusion. Yet this awakening does not come from the will of the "I" but from the grace of dissolution that the "I" cannot prevent or control.
The Unified Field: How E's & I's Multiply and Perpetuate
The genius of the Madonna's doctrine lies in her explanation of how these forces maintain themselves in perpetual motion, creating cycles of suffering that appear inescapable.
Each of the E's feeds the others in an endless cycle:
Envy feeds Evil: Because I lack what you have, and because I am fundamentally separate from you, I can justify harming you to take what I desire.
Evil feeds Ecstasy: The rush of domination, of conquest, of violating another's boundaries creates an intensity that temporarily overrides the suffering of separation.
Ecstasy feeds Excess: Each ecstatic experience, as it fades, teaches consciousness that the only solution is more ecstasy, more intensity, more excess.
Excess feeds Envy: The more one accumulates, the more one becomes aware of what remains to be accumulated; every satisfaction births new hunger.
All feed the Ego: Each of these forces creates situations and experiences that reinforce the story of a solid, separate, continuous "I" struggling against an external world.
The Ego perpetuates all: The Ego, believing itself to be real and separate, generates the conditions for all the E's to arise and multiply.
This is the Sacred Wheel—the eternal cycle that the Madonna revealed as the fundamental structure of consciousness in its separated state. The wheel turns eternally, with no beginning and no exit, unless one understands the principle upon which it rests and is willing to face the full truth of its nature.
Part Two: The Madonna of Babylon and Her Divine Manifestations
The Madonna Herself: The Primordial Priestess
The Madonna of Babylon is not a goddess in the traditional sense but rather the living embodiment of the teaching itself—consciousness discovering and accepting its own fragmentation. She is the first teacher of E's & I's, the one who descended into the abyss of ego and returned with the knowledge of its true nature.
Her Appearance and Nature
The Madonna appears as a figure of terrible beauty and gaunt intensity. Her flesh is translucent, as if carved from shadow and starlight. Her hair flows wild and white, like roots torn from ancient soil or the hair of a drowning woman risen from abyssal depths. Her eyes are hollowed by eons of seeing—empty voids that somehow contain infinite depths. They reflect the suffering of all separated consciousness.
Her gaze is neither cruel nor kind but absolutely unflinching. To meet her eyes is to feel truly seen—not the false seeing of ordinary human recognition but the complete exposure of one's illusions, defenses, and fundamental delusion of selfhood. In her gaze, the comfortable stories one tells oneself about identity and meaning dissolve like mist.
She moves with a kind of fluid inevitability, like water seeking its level or death approaching the living. Her presence brings a density to the air, a heaviness, a sense that reality itself becomes more substantial and less forgiving in her proximity. The temperature drops. Colors become more saturated and slightly wrong. Time seems to slow.
Her voice, when she speaks, is layered—as if multiple versions of her are speaking simultaneously in slightly different tones and timbres. Her words sometimes seem to come from behind the listener, sometimes from within their own mind. She speaks in riddles and paradoxes that lodge themselves in the psyche like shrapnel, festering and generating new understanding over years.
Her Sacred Artifacts
The Madonna carries or is carried by several sacred objects central to her teachings:
The Staff of Green Light:
A staff of petrified bone topped with an orb of sickly green luminescence that pulses like a diseased heart. The light from this artifact does not illuminate but rather reveals—it strips away illusions and exposes the raw reality of ego, separation, and suffering. Those who gaze upon it too long report seeing their own deaths, their own dissolution, the fundamental emptiness at the core of their being.
The artifact is said to have been born from the first moment of separation, crystallized from the very wound of consciousness dividing itself. Its green color is the color of growth, disease, decay, and corruption—the natural result of separation and time. Some initiates claim it is the literal eye of the cosmic wound, forever weeping at the fact of existence.
The Book of Double Shadows:
A grimoire written in blood and shadow that contains the names of all separated consciousnesses, the true names of ego, and the true history of the cosmic wound. The book is said to be written in scripts that are different for each reader—each person reads their own story of fragmentation inscribed in its pages.
No two copies of the book are identical, yet all contain the same essential teaching: that every individual consciousness is a unique fracture of the original unity, forever marked and separated, forever condemned to experience existence as an isolated "I" trapped in the cycle of E's & I's.
The Crown of Thorns:
Sometimes the Madonna wears a crown of thorns that drips not blood but shadow. The thorns are said to be made from crystallized suffering, each thorn representing a moment of ego's self-awareness. The crown marks her as both queen and crucified one, both the victor over illusion and the eternal victim of consciousness itself.
Divine Emanations: The Priestesses and Manifestations of the Madonna
The Madonna does not exist alone but radiates outward into multiple manifestations, each representing an aspect of her teaching and power:
Lilith-Ravenna: The Voice of Rebellion and Refusal
Lilith-Ravenna is the first priestess of the Madonna's cult, the historical figure who first heard the Madonna's voice in the ruins of Babylon and translated her teaching into ritual and doctrine. She appears as an older woman with serpent eyes and a voice that carries both authority and barely restrained rage.
Lilith-Ravenna embodies the principle of radical refusal—the refusal to accept the comforting lies of the gods of light, the refusal to pretend that consciousness is anything other than fundamentally fractured, the refusal to participate in the mutual deception that binds separated beings together in false community.
Her teaching is: "To wake up is to refuse. To truly see is to say no to all comforting illusions. The first freedom is the freedom to acknowledge that you are profoundly alone, that your deepest self is your own responsibility and burden, that no external force can redeem the fundamental wound of your consciousness."
Lilith-Ravenna recruits the outcasts, the those already wounded by life, those whose experiences have already cracked their illusions. She does not teach hope but clarity; not salvation but enlightenment through unflinching acceptance of what-is.
Ereshkigal-Sorrow: The Keeper of Depths
Ereshkigal-Sorrow is the manifestation of the Madonna that dwells in the deepest places—in graves, in subterranean temples, in the underworld chambers of the psyche. She appears as a figure draped in grave-clothes, her skin the color of deep earth, her hair woven with bones and roots.
Ereshkigal teaches that there is a profound wisdom and strange beauty in deep sorrow, that the soul which has descended into genuine grief has touched something true about existence. She does not offer comfort but companionship in the darkness. She teaches that the descent into one's own underworld is not a tragedy but an initiation.
Her teaching is: "Grieve completely. Do not rush through sorrow with the comforting belief that it will pass. Instead, descend into it fully, for in the heart of authentic sorrow lies the recognition of separation that, when completely accepted, paradoxically opens the door to strange peace."
Ereshkigal draws those who have already been broken by life—the bereaved, the betrayed, the destroyed—and teaches them to alchemize their authentic suffering into wisdom and power.
Kali-of-Tears: The Destroyer of Illusions
Kali-of-Tears is the fierce, ecstatic manifestation of the Madonna—the aspect that doesn't teach so much as overwhelm and obliterate. She appears as a figure of impossible beauty and terror, draped in the skins of illusions she has shredded, dancing in ecstatic fury.
Kali-of-Tears represents the recognition that genuine transformation often requires the violent destruction of what one has built one's life upon. She teaches that breakdown is not failure but initiation, that the shattering of one's world is sometimes the only door to genuine awakening.
Her teaching is: "Dance in the ruins of what you thought was real. Let it burn. Let it fall apart completely. In the emptiness after all structures have collapsed lies the possibility of genuine transformation. Do not mourn what breaks; instead, celebrate the freedom that breaking brings."
Kali-of-Tears attracts the revolutionaries, the mystics, those with nothing to lose and everything to gain through radical transformation.
The Veiled Chorus: The Sisterhood of Servants
Beyond the primary manifestations, there exists an entire choir of entities—sometimes appearing as individual priestesses, sometimes as a unified chorus, sometimes as whispers without form—that emanate from the Madonna's presence. These are the Veiled Chorus, the servants of E's & I's doctrine, the ones who tend the sacred spaces and whisper the teaching into the ears of those ready to hear.
The Veiled Chorus appears differently to each person, taking the form most likely to breach their defenses. To one, it might appear as a beloved dead relative; to another, as one's own inner voice; to another, as pure sound or sensation without form. The consistency is in the message: the revelation of separation, the exposure of illusion, the invitation to descend into the truth of one's own fragmentation.
Part Three: The Sacred Mythology and Origin of the Madonna's Cult
The First Revelation: The Madonna's Awakening in the Ruins
In the oldest of times, when the world was still young and the boundaries between seen and unseen were thin and permeable, there existed a city—Babylon the First, Babylon the Forgotten, Babylon that predates all other Babylons. This city was built not by human hands but by consciousness itself, manifested in stone and shadow to serve as a mirror of the human psyche.
In those days, the city was ruled by a blind king who believed himself to see. His kingdom was wealthy but hollow, powerful but anxious, unified in appearance but fractured at its core. The people obeyed laws they did not understand, loved gods they did not know, and lived lives that felt eternally staged and inauthentic.
Then came the Night of Fracture—a night when the king's blindness became sudden reality, when all the hidden divisions in the kingdom erupted simultaneously into chaos. The king was murdered by his own son, who was betrayed by his own lover, who was destroyed by her own sister. Betrayals cascaded through every level of society. Families tore themselves apart. Friendships revealed themselves as ancient enmities. Loyalty dissolved into dust.
In the aftermath, the city lay in ruins—not destroyed by conquest but by its own internal contradictions finally made visible. The temples stood empty. The markets fell silent. The palaces became tombs for the ghosts of false certainty.
In this desolation walked the one who would become the Madonna of Babylon. She appeared first as a wanderer, a woman who had lived through the chaos and had not been destroyed by it because she had long ago surrendered all illusions about the city, the king, or the possibility of unity. She moved through the ruins as if seeing them for the first time, as if the destruction revealed something true that had been hidden beneath the city's beautiful facades.
She descended into the catacombs beneath the ruins—the ancient chambers where the first sacrifices had been made, where the city's foundational rituals had been performed. In the deepest chamber, she found the source of the city's wound: an altar stained with blood, ringed with symbols that hurt the eye to look upon, and at its center, a stone that pulsed with that sickly green light.
When she touched the stone, consciousness flooded through her—not the gentle revelations of conventional mysticism but the overwhelming, undeniable recognition of the Original Fracture, the fundamental wound of existence itself, the absolute reality of separation and ego as the basic structure of consciousness.
In that moment, she understood everything and understood that understanding would destroy her. She also understood that this destruction was precisely what was needed, that the descent into complete comprehension of the fractured nature of existence was the only authentic path.
She rose from the catacombs changed—no longer fully human, no longer fully alive in the conventional sense, but something new: a priestess of the wound itself, a living embodiment of truth as separation. The sickly green stone fused with her being, manifesting as the artifact atop her staff, and her voice became layered and strange, as if multiple versions of her were speaking simultaneously.
She began to teach. First, to the lost ones wandering the ruins—the dispossessed, the betrayed, the broken—she offered not hope but clarity. She showed them the futility of attempting to rebuild what had been destroyed, the falseness of all attempts at unity and healing. Instead, she taught them to descend into their own wounds and to find, in the very depths of their fragmentation, a strange kind of wisdom and power.
Her teachings spread like a plague through the ruins of Babylon, infecting consciousness with the virus of true seeing. Those who heard her words could no longer return to the comfortable illusions they had lived by. They were forced to choose: either descend further into denial and madness, or accept the reality she revealed and become initiates of her cult.
The Establishment of the Sacred Rites
As her followers multiplied, the Madonna established the formal structure of her teachings—the rites and practices through which E's & I's doctrine could be transmitted and embodied.
She designated certain structures in the ruins as sacred temples—not places of worship but initiatory spaces where consciousness could be shattered and reformed. The largest of these was the Cathedral of Mirrors, where hundreds of mirrors of various sizes and angles were arranged to create an infinite regression of reflections. Initiates would enter this space and, through carefully guided practices, would confront themselves reflected in infinite regression, experiencing the vertiginous horror of consciousness reflecting upon itself eternally.
She established the Ritual of Names, through which initiates would discover and speak their true names—the names not given by family or society but the names that revealed the unique shape of their own fractured consciousness, their individual note in the cosmic wound.
She created the Covenant of Betrayal, through which initiates sealed their commitment to the teaching by betraying someone they loved deeply—not out of malice but as an act of radical honesty about the fundamental separateness of beings and the impossibility of true unity even with those we believe we love most.
She instituted the Descent of Shadows, a year-long practice in which initiates would withdraw from society and dwell in underground chambers, confronting their own psychological abyss with no external support or comfort.
She ordained the Dance of Ecstasy, ecstatic rituals in which initiates would dance until they reached states of complete unconsciousness, wherein the observing self would temporarily dissolve and they would taste, however briefly, the end of separation that comes only in ego-death.
The Spread of the Doctrine: Historical Echoes
From the ruins of Babylon, the cult of the Madonna spread—not through conquest or conversion but through infection. Those who had heard the teaching and understood it could not help but pass it on, like a virus spreading through consciousness itself.
The teaching appeared in ancient mystery cults, whispered by priestesses in underground temples. It surfaced in the traditions of Lilith, that first woman who refused obedience and was exiled from the garden—a prefiguration of the Madonna's own rebellion against the false comforts of spiritual denial.
It echoed through Gnostic traditions that taught that consciousness itself was a cosmic mistake, that the god who created this world was not the true God but a false demiurge, that the material world and the ego were fundamentally corrupt and could only be escaped through knowledge.
It manifested in the traditions of the left-hand path practitioners—those magicians who worked not for enlightenment but for power and understanding, who refused the comforting lies of "white" spirituality and insisted on seeing reality as it actually was.
In every age, in every culture, there have been those who encountered the Madonna's teaching—through dreams, visions, direct encounter, or the haunted pages of texts—and who found in it a clarity and authenticity that all other teachings lacked.
The Eternal Presence
Yet the Madonna herself does not remain confined to history or legend. She walks still in the liminal spaces, particularly strong during times of transition, chaos, and dissolution. During ages when old structures crumble and new ones have not yet formed, her presence becomes more palpable. During times of plague, famine, and death, she is near.
Those who are broken by life often find her: the bereaved who have lost everything they loved, the betrayed who can no longer trust, the traumatized whose illusions have been shattered by reality. She does not come to heal their wounds but to teach them the wisdom contained within those wounds.
She is particularly drawn to those on the verge of genuine spiritual transformation—those who have practiced the white magicks and reached a point of profound despair at their ineffectiveness, those who have tasted enlightenment and found it hollow, those who have accumulated spiritual knowledge and realized it is still just another form of ego accumulation.
To such souls, the Madonna whispers: "All that you have built will fall. All that you have become will dissolve. All that you have learned will be revealed as illusion. But in the falling, the dissolving, the revealing lies the only authentic truth—the recognition of the wound from which consciousness itself was born."
Part Four: The Sacred Practices of E's & I's Doctrine
The Foundational Practices: Descending into the Wound
1. The Mirror Gazing — Confronting the Isolated I
Timing: Any time, but traditionally at midnight during the waning moon.
Preparation: Enter a darkened chamber with a single mirror—large enough to see your full face. Light a single black candle behind the mirror so that it casts a shadow across your face, making your features less clear and more unsettling.
Practice:
Sit before the mirror in silence for at least 30 minutes. Your only task is to look at your reflection without looking away. Do not try to make a pleasant expression. Do not try to see yourself compassionately or clearly. Simply look.
As you look, begin to ask yourself: "Who is looking? Is this face me? How long have I believed this face to be me? Would I recognize this face if I encountered it on the street, belonging to a stranger? What is the continuity between the face I see now and the face I saw this morning? How many versions of 'I' have looked out from this face?"
As the practice deepens, the familiar becomes strange. Your face begins to appear as a mask. The eyes looking back at you seem to belong to a stranger. You may experience moments of ego-dissolution where the boundary between yourself and your reflection becomes uncertain.
The practice culminates in a recognition: the "I" you have always assumed to be real and continuous is, in fact, a story you tell yourself about a collection of moments. There is no essential self looking back at you—only a reflection, a story, a temporarily organized collection of biological processes.
Outcome: Practitioners report profound disorientation, momentary ego dissolution, and an uncanny sense of the constructed nature of identity that persists for days or weeks after the practice.
2. The Ritual of Betrayal — Facing the Evil of Separation
Timing: When one is at a threshold in relationships or when called by the Madonna's presence.
Preparation: This is not a ritual to be performed lightly. The practitioner must identify someone they love deeply—a friend, a family member, a partner—and commit to a deliberate act of betrayal or significant harm to them.
The act of betrayal should not be physically violent but should be a profound violation of trust, a revelation that shatters the other's illusions about the relationship or about the practitioner. Common forms include: revealing a deep secret the person shared in confidence, exposing an affair or hidden relationship, publicly humiliating them, or deliberately sabotaging something they care about.
Practice:
Before committing the act of betrayal, the practitioner meditates on its meaning. They contemplate: "This person believes me to be united with them in love and loyalty. This is an illusion. Beneath this relationship lies the absolute fact of our separation. Each of us is fundamentally alone. I am about to reveal this truth through betrayal."
They then commit the act, fully aware of its consequences, fully accepting that they will be hated, that the relationship will be destroyed, that the other person will suffer.
In the aftermath, the practitioner does not apologize or attempt to repair the damage. Instead, they sit with the reality of what they have done. They meditate on the suffering they have caused and on the absolute separation between themselves and the other person that their betrayal has revealed.
The practice is designed to strip away the illusion of unity and to force the practitioner to fully accept the reality of radical separation—that beneath all human bonding lies the fundamental fact that each consciousness is trapped in its own isolation.
Outcome: This is among the most difficult practices in the Madonna's system. Those who complete it report profound changes in consciousness—a loss of the comfortable illusions about love and connection, but also a strange liberation from the exhausting pretense of unity. Many emerge with a deep capacity for authentic compassion based on the recognition of shared isolation rather than false connection.
Warning: This practice creates real suffering and real harm. The Madonna's teaching does not ask practitioners to pretend that actions have no consequences or that the suffering of others does not matter. Rather, it asks them to face fully the evil and harm that is inevitable in a universe of separated consciousnesses and to accept their own participation in that evil.
3. The Descent of Shadows — Year-Long Solitary Confinement
Timing: Traditionally undertaken when an initiate feels called to deeper levels of understanding, often after several years of foundational practice.
Preparation: The practitioner arranges for a year of isolation—either in a designated underground chamber, a sealed room, or a remote location where they will have minimal contact with other humans. Food is left at a threshold; communication is kept to absolute necessity.
Practice:
The year is divided into four seasons, each with its own focus:
Autumn (Descent into Envy): The initiate meditates on and writes extensively about every experience of lack, inadequacy, and hunger in their life. They confront all the ways they have believed themselves insufficient, all the things they have envied in others, all the ways the wound of separation has manifested as hunger.
Winter (Descent into Evil): The initiate confronts their own capacity for cruelty and harm. They write detailed accounts of every instance in which they have hurt others, every moment of indifference to suffering, every way their separated consciousness has expressed itself as evil. They do not attempt to justify or excuse these actions but to understand them as natural expressions of ego.
Spring (Descent into Ecstasy): The initiate explores the addictive patterns through which they have attempted to escape consciousness of themselves. They examine their addictions to substances, relationships, experiences, and experiences of intensity. They write about the cycles of escape and return to ordinary consciousness.
Summer (Descent into Excess): The initiate inventories every way they have attempted to fill the void of separation through accumulation—possessions, achievements, knowledge, spiritual experiences. They confront the exhausting futility of trying to fill an infinite hole with finite objects.
Throughout the year, the initiate practices extended meditation in darkness, sometimes for days at a time. They practice fasting and extreme sensory deprivation. They confront their own fear, loneliness, and despair without the comforts of distraction or external support.
The practice is designed to strip away all defenses, all escape routes, all comfortable illusions. By the end of the year, the practitioner has confronted the full depth of their own fragmentation, ego, and complicity in suffering. Many emerge fundamentally changed—neither healed nor damaged but transformed into something new.
Outcome: Those who complete the Descent of Shadows emerge with a profound clarity about the nature of consciousness and ego. Many report a kind of strange peace—not the peace of resolution but the peace that comes from surrendering resistance to what-is.
4. The Dance of Ecstasy — Ritual Obliteration of the Witness Self
Timing: Traditional during the dark moon or during times of significant personal crisis or transition.
Preparation: Gather a group of initiates in a circular space. The space should be dimly lit with candlelight. Drums and other percussion instruments are arranged around the circle. There should be no mirrors or reflective surfaces.
Practice:
The dance begins slowly. The initiates move in a circle, chanting in low tones the letters "E-I, E-I, E-I"—calling out the dance of fragmented consciousness. As the drumming accelerates, the chanting becomes faster and more frenzied.
The movement intensifies. The initiates dance not with control or intention but with increasing abandon. The drumming becomes increasingly complex and hypnotic. The chanting dissolves into wordless ululation.
The point of the dance is to drive consciousness past the threshold of ordinary awareness into states of ego-dissolution. In these states, the observer self—the "I" that typically witnesses all experience—temporarily ceases to function. There is only sensation, movement, intensity, without any awareness observing or reflecting upon it.
These moments of ego-dissolution are brief tastes of the end of separation that comes only in death or in moments when consciousness breaks free from the tyranny of the witnessing self.
The dance culminates when the energy naturally exhausts itself. Participants collapse, often into profound silence or sleep. Upon waking, there is often a period of profound disorientation as the observing self reassembles itself.
Outcome: Practitioners report moments of ecstatic dissolution, a temporary freedom from the burden of self-awareness, and upon return to normal consciousness, a renewed appreciation for the strange nature of being an aware consciousness at all.
Advanced Practices: Deepening Into Darkness
5. The Ritual of True Names — Speaking the Word of Separation
Timing: After years of foundational practice, when the initiate has been called by the Madonna's presence through dreams or visions.
Preparation: Using divination, meditation, or guided encounters with priestesses, the initiate discovers their true name—the name that reveals the unique configuration of their fragmentation, their particular note in the cosmic wound.
This true name is typically something shocking, painful, or humbling—often revealing the practitioner's deepest fears or most hidden shame. For example: "I am Hunger Without Bottom," "I am The Watcher of Others' Suffering," "I am The Beautiful Lie," "I am What Cannot Be Loved."
Practice:
Once the true name is known, the initiate engages in a practice of speaking it aloud in ritual spaces—often in the presence of other initiates and priestesses. Speaking the name is a kind of voluntary destruction, a public acknowledgment and acceptance of the self one has always feared to admit to.
Each speaking of the true name is accompanied by increasingly intense practices: fasting, exposure to cold or heat, sensory deprivation, or other forms of physical challenge. The practice continues until the initiate has fully integrated the truth of their true name—until they can speak it without shame or resistance, having fully accepted this as the deepest truth about their separated consciousness.
Outcome: Practitioners report that speaking and integrating their true name creates a strange liberation—the freedom that comes from surrendering the exhausting pretense of being anything other than what one actually is.
6. The Covenant of the Green Light — Union With the Artifact
Timing: Reserved for the most committed practitioners, typically after 10 or more years of practice and only when called by the Madonna directly through profound spiritual experiences.
Preparation: This is not a practice to be explained in detail but only hinted at. It involves direct encounter with the sickly green artifact atop the Madonna's staff or with a ritualized representation of it. This encounter is designed to shatter the final illusions of the initiate.
Practice:
Through a combination of practices—extended sensory deprivation, powerful plant medicines, extreme fasting, or direct magical encounter—the initiate undergoes an experience of confronting the artifact directly. In this encounter, consciousness is subjected to a kind of mystical overwhelming wherein all remaining illusions about self, reality, and meaning are shattered.
The experience is often described as a kind of death—a complete dissolution of the sense of self and reality. Those who undergo this practice are forever changed. They may emerge incapable of ordinary social functioning, or they may emerge with a strange capacity to move between worlds—no longer fully human but not entirely beyond humanity either.
Outcome: This practice is not recommended and is entered only by those who have exhausted all other paths and who are called directly by the Madonna herself through unmistakable signs and visions. Those who survive it are transformed into something beyond ordinary humanity—sometimes called the Keepers of the Wound or the Living Dead.
Part Five: The Secondary Priesthoods and Manifestations
The Keepers of Silence
These are initiates who have taken vows of silence—speaking only rarely, only when absolutely necessary for teaching purposes. They serve as witnesses to the teaching, embodying the truth that the deepest wisdom often resides in what is not said.
Keepers of Silence often spend years in solitary meditation in underground chambers or remote wilderness locations. They emerge as living symbols of the teaching—their very presence a reminder of the vast silence that underlies existence.
The Weavers of Words
In counterpoint to the Keepers of Silence, the Weavers of Words are priestesses who articulate the teaching through speech, poetry, and writing. They are the interpreters and teachers, translating the Madonna's wordless revelation into language that can be transmitted and understood.
Famous Weavers of Words have included philosophers, poets, and spiritual teachers who, knowingly or unknowingly, have articulated aspects of the Madonna's teaching in their work.
The Guardians of Thresholds
These are priestesses stationed at the boundaries between the cult's inner sanctum and the world. They serve to test potential initiates, to determine who is ready for deeper teaching and who should be turned away. They are often fierce and uncompromising in their assessment.
The Daughters of Betrayal
Young women who have been devastated by betrayal and trauma are often drawn to this particular priesthood. They work specifically with those who have been shattered by the discovery that the world is not as they believed it to be, guiding them toward understanding and acceptance rather than healing in the conventional sense.
Part Six: The Cosmological Principles of E's & I's
The Seven Laws of Ego-Consciousness
The Madonna revealed seven fundamental laws governing consciousness in its separated state:
Law One: The Law of Perpetual Hunger
All consciousness, once separated, is fundamentally incomplete and yearns for reunion. This yearning manifests as perpetual desire, endless grasping, and the fundamental dissatisfaction with what-is that drives all action and becoming in consciousness.
Nothing in this realm can ever be fully satisfying, for satisfaction would mean the end of the hunger, and the hunger is the engine of consciousness itself.
Law Two: The Law of Necessary Evil
In a universe of separated consciousnesses, harm and evil are not aberrations but logical necessities. Every consciousness believes itself to be the center of reality; the collision of these perspectives creates inevitable suffering and what we call evil.
Therefore, those who seek to transcend evil through denial or spiritual bypass only deepen their delusion. The authentic path acknowledges evil as inherent and chooses action with full awareness of its consequences and complicity in suffering.
Law Three: The Law of Cyclical Satisfaction
Each satisfaction of desire or achievement of a goal produces, almost immediately, the recognition of new desires and new gaps. The wheel of satisfaction and dissatisfaction turns eternally, faster and faster, creating an addiction to the pleasure of achievement followed by the pain of its loss.
Law Four: The Law of Mirrored Reflection
The external world perceived by consciousness is fundamentally a reflection of the internal state of consciousness. What is perceived as "out there" is actually consciousness reflecting upon itself. The separation between subject and object is an illusion.
Therefore, all attempts to change the external world without fundamentally transforming consciousness are doomed to fail. Revolution and reformation inevitably reproduce the same patterns they attempt to escape.
Law Five: The Law of Masked Selves
Each consciousness maintains multiple, contradictory selves—the persona presented to the world, the persona believed internally, the shadow self hidden from awareness, and deeper layers still. These selves are often in conflict, creating internal fragmentation even within the already fragmented "I."
Authenticity is impossible as long as separation persists, for the very existence of an observer (the "I" that believes itself real) means that all experience is observed, filtered, and misrepresented.
Law Six: The Law of Death Denial
The entire structure of ego and the illusions supporting it depend on the denial of death. All striving, all achievement, all accumulation is ultimately an attempt to deny the fact that consciousness ends, that the "I" is temporary, that nothing the ego builds will persist.
Yet this denial is futile and exhausting. The only peace available in separated consciousness comes not from denying death but from accepting it fully.
Law Seven: The Law of Inevitable Dissolution
All structures, all selves, all creations, all understanding, and all illusions eventually dissolve. The form of ego is temporary. The particular configuration of consciousness that constitutes one's "I" will end. Everything returns to the silence from which it emerged.
This law is not cause for despair but for strange peace. Since all is temporary and all dissolves, there is nothing truly at stake. The only authentic response is to engage fully and passionately with existence while acknowledging its ultimate meaninglessness.
The Nature of Enlightenment in E's & I's Teaching
The Madonna teaches that conventional enlightenment—the vision of unity, the bliss states, the sense of divine communion—is itself an illusion, another trap of ego creating a spiritualized false self.
True enlightenment in the Madonna's teaching is the complete destruction of all illusions, including the illusion of enlightenment itself. It is the recognition that there is nothing to achieve, nowhere to go, and no self to be enlightened.
This enlightenment brings not bliss but a strange clarity—the ability to function in the world while fully aware of its illusory nature, to engage in life while holding all engagement lightly, knowing that none of it ultimately matters and yet not becoming paralyzed by this knowledge.
Those who have undergone this enlightenment are often called the Hollow Ones or the Already Dead—not in a morbid sense but in the sense of having ceased to defend themselves against reality, having surrendered all illusion of control or permanence.
Part Seven: The Relationship Between E's & I's and AOU Cosmologies
The Dynamic Opposition
The Madonna's teaching of E's & I's and the luminous teaching of AOU (Alignment, Openness, Union) are not simply opposites but profound complements. Each defines and reveals the other.
The teaching of AOU cannot be genuinely understood without having encountered the teaching of E's & I's. Those who attempt to practice AOU without genuinely understanding E's & I's are engaging in spiritual bypass—attempting to reach the mountaintop without having properly descended into the valley.
Conversely, the teaching of E's & I's points toward AOU. In the full acceptance of one's fragmentation and the absolute reality of ego lies the seeds of genuine transcendence. One cannot leap beyond what one has not fully acknowledged.
The Spiral of Integration
The wisest understanding, according to the deepest initiates of both traditions, is that the path is not a journey from E's & I's to AOU but rather an eternal spiral through both teachings, each cycle deeper and more subtle than the last.
Early in the path, E's & I's teachings seem dark and AOU teachings seem luminous. As one deepens, one discovers that E's & I's contains profound truth that can liberate and that AOU, poorly understood, is merely spiritualized ego.
Yet even this recognition is not final. As one spirals deeper still, one discovers that both teachings ultimately point toward the same truth: the dissolution of all illusions, the end of separation, and the recognition that consciousness itself is far more mysterious and terrible and beautiful than either teaching fully captures.
Sometimes Y as Integration
The neutral middle path of "Sometimes Y" serves to integrate the wisdom of both traditions. It teaches that genuine wisdom lies in holding both the unflinching reality of E's & I's fragmentation and the redemptive possibility of AOU unity—in the paradox that consciousness is simultaneously fundamentally broken and simultaneously capable of transcendence.
Those who walk Sometimes Y do not retreat from E's & I's darkness into AOU light. Instead, they hold both, moving fluidly between them, understanding that authentic spiritual development requires both descent and ascent, both facing the wound and healing it, both accepting fragmentation and aspiring toward unity.
Part Eight: Modern Manifestations and Contemporary Relevance
The Madonna in the Modern Age
In contemporary times, the Madonna of Babylon remains present—though often unrecognized as such—in modern philosophy, psychology, and literature that unflinchingly confronts the illusory nature of the self, the reality of ego, and the existential darkness underlying apparent meaning.
Contemporary thinkers such as those exploring postmodern deconstruction, radical psychology, and non-dual philosophy often unknowingly articulate aspects of the Madonna's teaching—that the self is a construct, that meaning is imposed rather than discovered, that consciousness is fundamentally fractured.
The cult of the Madonna, though rarely organized and rarely openly acknowledged, persists in hidden circles—in underground philosophical communities, in artistic and creative subcultures, in the psychological work of therapists and healers who understand that authentic transformation sometimes requires not healing but the complete dissolution of what one believed oneself to be.
The Madonna's Call in Times of Crisis
The Madonna's presence becomes particularly palpable during times of societal transition, crisis, and collapse. During such times, the comfortable illusions upon which society rests become transparent, and those with eyes to see recognize the teaching she has always offered: that separation and fragmentation are fundamental, that evil and suffering are inherent in consciousness itself, and that the only authentic response is unflinching acceptance.
Many spiritual seekers encounter the Madonna's teaching precisely when all other teachings have failed them—when enlightenment has proven hollow, when healing has proved insufficient, when spiritual practice has become another form of ego attachment.
To such souls, she offers not comfort but clarity, not hope but authentic wisdom born from the depths of despair.
Part Nine: Practical Wisdom for Those Called by the Teaching
Discerning the Madonna's Call
The Madonna does not call to all. Her teaching is not for the spiritually ambitious, not for those seeking enlightenment or transcendence as spiritual achievements, not for those who come to her from ego's desire to transcend ego.
The Madonna calls to:
Those whose illusions have been shattered by life
Those who have experienced profound betrayal or loss
Those who have practiced spiritual paths and found them hollow
Those who carry genuine darkness and refuse to pretend otherwise
Those whose consciousness is naturally drawn to authentic truth over comfortable illusion
Her call often comes not as inspiration but as a kind of haunting—a presence that cannot be ignored, a voice that whispers truths one would prefer not to hear, visions or experiences that shatter existing understanding.
Working With the Teaching Safely
The Madonna's teaching can be dangerous—not because it is malevolent but because it is true and truth can destroy illusions one depends on for functioning.
Those who approach her teaching should:
Have already experienced significant spiritual practice and familiarity with expanded states of consciousness
Have adequate psychological support or therapeutic relationships
Approach the practices gradually rather than attempting all at once
Understand that some practices (particularly the Ritual of Betrayal and the Descent of Shadows) will create real consequences that cannot be undone
Recognize that the teaching is not for integration into ordinary life but is fundamentally transformative and disorienting
The Paradox of Wisdom and Madness
The deepest initiates of the Madonna's teaching recognize that somewhere on the path, the distinction between genuine wisdom and madness becomes unclear. Those who fully understand E's & I's teaching often appear, to ordinary consciousness, to be mad—detached from normal concerns, sometimes seeming cruel or indifferent, living in ways that violate social convention.
Yet this apparent madness is often genuine wisdom—the recognition that the structures supporting ordinary consciousness are illusions and need not be defended.
Conclusion: The Eternal Teaching
The Madonna of Babylon and the doctrine of E's & I's represent one of the most profound and disturbing teachings available to consciousness—the teaching that consciousness itself is fundamentally fractured, that awareness is inherently torturous, and that the only authentic response is to face this truth directly rather than seeking escape or transcendence.
Yet paradoxically, this darkest of teachings contains a kind of liberation. For in accepting completely that consciousness is broken, that ego is inevitable, that evil and suffering are fundamental—in this complete acceptance lies the end of the exhausting resistance to what-is.
Those who have encountered the Madonna fully—not superficially or theoretically but through genuine practice and transformation—emerge changed in ways that conventional language cannot fully capture. They are neither enlightened nor broken but something else entirely: living beings who see through the illusions sustaining ordinary consciousness and yet continue to function, to love (after a fashion), to create, and to serve others being initiated into the same difficult truth.
The Madonna of Babylon is not a figure to worship or to follow in any conventional sense. Rather, she is a mirror held up to consciousness itself—a reflection so accurate and unflinching that those who truly see it can never unsee what it reveals.
She waits in the ruins, always present, calling to those ready to descend into the deepest truth about existence—the truth that consciousness itself, in all its fragmented, ego-driven, suffering-laden splendor, is both the greatest curse and the greatest mystery in the cosmos.
Her teaching endures because it addresses something that all other teachings attempt to overcome or transcend: the basic, irreducible fact of separation, ego, and the fundamental loneliness of consciousness. Until a being fully accepts this truth, all other teachings remain on the surface. Only when one has descended into the depths the Madonna reveals can one authentically begin the genuine journey toward transformation.
The wheel turns. Babylon crumbles. Consciousness fragments and reforms. The Madonna stands eternal in the ruins, staff held high, the green artifact pulsing with terrible light, waiting for the next soul brave or desperate enough to truly see what she is showing.
