Light That Gives Birth to Worlds
The Sun is an independent arbiter, an eternal witness, and a creator of reality. It does not judge or take sides, yet it is its energy that moves the world. Sunlight gives rise to forms, fills space with meaning, and brings emptiness to life. It can give life and it can take it away—not out of cruelty, but because this is the law of the universe.
Light is the first will manifested in matter. Without it, there are no outlines, no movement, no perception. It gives the ability to see, to feel, to become aware. Light is not just energy—it is the very structure of the universe, its language, its breath. Everything that exists is merely a dance of light and shadow, and we, being part of it, carry it within ourselves.

Fire is the earthly embodiment of this law. It belongs to no one, yet since ancient times people have tried to tame it. It warms, purifies, destroys—but most importantly, it transforms. Everything that fire touches is never the same again. It is the threshold between the old and the new, a conduit between the dense and the subtle, the material and the immaterial.
Hydrogen is the first element of the universe, the foundation of all stars, and at the same time a symbol of primordial fire. Everything that exists was once flame and will become it again. Every atom of hydrogen in our bodies once burned in the depths of stars—meaning we are descendants of fire, a continuation of the great burning, patterns of flame frozen in time.
Everything comes through fire and leaves through it. This is not destruction, but a great cycle of transformation. Some things burn to ashes, while others pass through the flame and become stronger. Everything that lives will one day encounter the purifying fire of change. Only those who are ready to accept this law are capable of being reborn, of transforming, of going beyond themselves.
Light is the boundary between the material and the immaterial, between the visible and the hidden. It permeates reality, yet remains elusive. We see its manifestations, but not its essence. Perhaps because light is not a phenomenon, but a principle. It exists wherever there is movement, understanding, awareness—where there is a spark capable of becoming a flame.
The Sun looks upon us without emotion, yet in that gaze lies truth. It reminds us that life is a process of burning—an unceasing striving to expand, to understand, to manifest. We come into this world to ignite our own light, to be flame, not ash. And when our spark merges with the great radiance of the Universe, a new cycle begins—a new dawn, a new star.