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The Authoring Self and The Shadow Self

Two timelines; one leads to drift, numbness, loops, delay. The other demands authorship, presence, pattern, return. A Mythogen inquiry about what happens with each.

Krishna Parashar's avatar
Krishna Parashar
Nov 03, 2025
Cross-posted by Mythogen
"This post marks the beginning of a new chapter: a space I’m building called Mythogen. It’s a philosophy, a system, and a slow technology, all rooted in the idea that our lives are not problems to solve, but stories to author. I’ve written the first post here, subscribe to follow this journey."
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Krishna Parashar

I wake up in the morning, sometimes with the alarm or the sun. Sometimes in a cortisol-induced urgency to start the day. Sometimes I awake with a slow exhale, a smile, and the warm invitation of excitement for the plans I can’t wait to live through.

And sometimes, I wake up in a kind of existential numbness, not knowing where I am anymore. Where my bed feels like a pylon holding my life together. Where I am numbingly unaware of where I stand in my life: in my relationships, in my work, or even in my body.

But mostly, I find: every day, I wake up as one of two men. The one who chooses, and the one who just waits.

I used to think this was some sort of predetermined thing - that each night I’d drift off, and the morning would reliably come, carrying the invisible sorting hat of fate and luck, and together they would determine what kind of day I’d have. How much energy. What kind of mood. How close or far I’d feel from myself.

I got really comfortable with this not choosing. With waking up as the version of me who never really steps forward. The one who is very, very good at making that option feel entirely reasonable. Preferable, even.

That version of me? That’s my shadow self.


On “The Shadow”

The phrase shadow self has taken on a kind of pop-psych notoriety. It’s been meme-ified, coached, and sold. You’ve heard the language: “inner child,” “shadow work,” “integration,” “healing your triggers,” “meeting the repressed parts.”

And while it points to something real, I’ve often found that narrative equally confusing and daunting. Shadow work sounded like spelunking headfirst into emotional darkness, a thing I should probably do, but am never quite ready for.

A good idea in practice, sure, but who has the time for it?

But the shadow, as I’ve come to understand it, isn’t just trauma, shame, or darkness. It’s not just your exiled rage or forgotten creativity.

It’s the version of you who never chooses.

It’s the self who waits. Who performs coherence, but never really feels at home. The one who scrolls more than he writes. Who cancels more than he shows up. Who keeps potential alive by never putting potentiality at risk.

It’s not dramatic. It’s subtle. And that’s what makes it dangerous.

“What is not brought to consciousness, comes to us as fate.”

– Carl Jung


The Hallway of Almost

The Shadow timeline. This is the drift path. The life that happens when you don’t return to yourself.

It looks fine on the outside.

You’re functioning.

Maybe even successful. You’re present..ish. But inside? You’re tired. Not from effort, from avoidance. You feel like you’re always catching up, vaguely apologizing for something, even if no one’s asked you to.

You feel like a ghost in your own schedule. You cancel plans with people you love. You move cities or apps or habits hoping something clicks. You say “next week” a lot.

You forget how to hold yourself through discomfort, so you numb. Or distract. Or delay. You light a candle but don’t sit with it. You cook a meal and eat it with the company of the new show that came out on Apple TV+. You write thoughts you don’t send. You speak in insights you haven’t lived.

You’re not in crisis. But you’re leaking.

Your mornings are loose. Your body feels like a negotiation. Your creative projects hover just out of reach.

You spend more time looking at others’ lives than shaping your own.

You feel unmoored, like you’re living without narrative gravity. The days blend. The body dulls. The purpose fades. Your drive putters into a vacuum.

You’re…rehearsing. Avoiding. Surviving. Drifting.

And you can drift a long time before anyone notices, even you.

But the most dangerous part? It feels tolerable. Reasonable. Even deserved.

“I just need a few days.”

“I’ll start fresh next week.”

“It’s just a season.”

You call it a lull. But it’s a loop. And loops, left unbroken, become lives.

This is not the path of collapse. It’s the suffocating hallway of almost.

It looks functional. You’re showing up. You answer some messages. You’re in a relationship. You even have a few good ideas. But something’s off. There’s no center to your day. No music to your movement. No fire in your decision-making.

You think about the people you miss. You romanticize the person you were. You believe you just need a bit more time to feel like yourself again.

You scroll. You perform habitual ritual without letting it touch you. You wait for clarity like it’s going to arrive fully formed.

You’re not failing. But you’re not authoring.


The Authoring Timeline

The aligned timeline is not about control. It’s not about optimization. It’s about returning.

To the part of you that still believes. To the calendar that reflects your actual values. To the conversation that moves something in your soul.

It’s about rhythm. About playing the beat to your own time.

The authoring timeline is not perfection. It’s not hustle or getting your shit together.

It is the path of friction that leads to fire. The mornings you don’t negotiate. The rituals you can keep even when you feel lost.

The boundaries you hold even when you feel lonely. The creations you finish even when no one is watching or waiting at the other end.

It’s the world where you do because it’s the doing that matters, not the having done.

The authoring timeline doesn’t feel perfect. But it feels alive.

You wake with reverence. You move your body. You light the candle and stay with it. You do the thing before you’re ready. You put work into the world, even when it’s unfinished. Especially when it’s unsure.

You love. You ship. You tell the truth. You rest with intention. You shape the hours. You protect your mornings. You follow through. You forgive. But you also finish.

You risk being seen.

You begin to feel authored. Like who you are is a series of choices, not a set of labels betrothed to you by others.

Self-determined. Not by circumstance. Not by pressure. But by presence.

You don’t walk it because you feel ready. You walk it because you’ve decided to come back to yourself.

Because you are tired of dancing to the rhythm of someone else’s drum.

You forgive yesterday, but you don’t hand it today’s pen.

This path isn’t easy. But it’s actually coherent. The narrative starts to build on itself. The past, the present, the future, don’t feel so vast, complex, and unknown.

Your life hums. You hum.

You energy still oscillates, but it builds up, instead of leaking out.

This path is made of self-structure: rhythms and rituals you author for yourself. Patterns that don’t confine you, but set you free. Anchors that hold even when the sky is grey.

You remember that your time is not something to manage, it is something to guide.

And this path only asks of you one thing: begin again. When you wake up and you feel off, and you feel like you deserve a break, a freedom from your life, and the comforting numbness of someone else choosing your path for you sounds amazing, you still, even then, begin again.

No summit to reach, or destination to end up in. Just the baby steps of daily movement into the direction of your choosing.

And soon.

You start to feel…authored.

Not by fate. Not by someone else’s design.

But by the part of you that still believes this life matters - to you.


The Cost of Drift

You won’t wake up one day and arrive in the authored life. There’s no end goal. There’s only practice, and the devotion to it. It doesn’t really ever stop, and that’s a good thing - it means you are alive.

You won’t wake up one day in full authorship. No one delivers you “The Authored Life™” in a 50 step program or a $599 coaching program.

It’s a slow awareness of all your daily moments, and an ever slower reorientation towards you.

You begin to make sense of your life story.

Patterns reveal themselves. You choose whether they repeat.

You stop exiling the parts of you that were messy, or inconsistent, or even hidden.

You use them, in your writing, your relationships, your rituals, your being.

People see your personality. People see you.

Some relationships drift away, some get tighter, but your life isn’t driven by that outcome. It’s not driven by the baggage of other people’s worldview imposed on you.

It’s not an excuse for narcissism, or self justifying sociopathy, it’s the choice to choose a life story that brings you alive, despite the consequences.

But if you don’t choose? You drift. And the longer you drift, the more the shadow feels like home. Every day you drift, the muscles of agency atrophy. The longer you stay in shadow, the more convincing it becomes. The more you forget that another way is possible.

The shadow timeline whispers, “You’re just in a season.”

The author timeline reminds you, “You are the season.”

I’ve lived both timelines. And most good days, I touch both before noon.

But I’m learning how to return. Slowly, in inklings. In baby steps that don’t feel like a whole lot of movement at all.

To light the candle and sit with it.

To remember my own agency.

To start writing the story instead of waiting to feel like the main character.


Welcome to Mythogen

We were told that modern technology would give us better lives, more clarity, more drive, more freedom, more joy.

Instead, it gave us apps that teach us to scroll before we even stand. It made waking up and flittering through micro-entertainment masquerade as living. It gave us love, sex, and relationship as a swipeable shopping cart. Health as a dashboard. Meaning as an algorithm. Attention as currency to arbitrage.

We moved from wonder to nihilism. From dreaming what AI could build, to fearing what it might erase: our work, our meaning, even our will to choose.

I know, because I helped build the old system. And I watched it fail us. I saw the crushing power of the status quo.

This was never the dream.

We don’t dismiss what tech has given us. But we know it can do more than distract and extract.

Mythogen is our attempt to begin again.

We ask:

  • What if the apps you use didn’t hijack your mind, but helped you return to it?

  • What if the systems we use helped us build a life we aspire to wake up and live, not hold us accountable to ones that we barely find tolerable?

  • What if your money told the story of your generosity to yourself and to others and helped you understand the things that brought you alive?

  • What if our goals didn’t need to be hacked, tricked, or gamified - because they actually mattered to us?

  • What if boredom wasn’t something we outsourced to a screen to fill with entertainment, but a moment to be listened to like a signal?

  • What if your productivity wasn’t just a grid of tasks to endlessly reschedule until the final-final deadline, but were systems that helped you structure a life you actually wanted to live?

  • What if technology was designed to be used less, as a means to an end, rather than as an end in of itself?

It’s not a simple product. You are not just a consumer.

It’s a perspective. One where technology serves the soul, not just the market.

And where systems are designed around your narrative instead of optimizing your productivity.

Mythogen isn’t optimized for engagement. It’s not gamified. It’s not built with the same coercive tricks we’re trying to escape.

It’s slow. It’s human. It’s sacred.

And we’re building it, for those of us ready to live a little mythically again.

  • To author identity.

  • To cultivate meaning.

  • To live with intention.

Join us, as we build this slowly. Not for mass adoption.

But for those who are ready to begin again.

This blog explores the philosophy behind Mythogen: the systems, rhythms, and questions that shape a life authored from within. Subscribe for free to receive essays as we build.

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