Cycles New
Definition
A working source text for the updated Netist cycle doctrine. It lays out the Cycle Ladder, the Primordial Cycle, material and biological cycles, spiritual or aethereal cycles, and the larger planetary, universal, cosmic, multiversal, chaos, and primordial frames.
Literal meaning
The newer cycles manuscript or draft.
Esoteric meaning
Cycles New is not a separate force or being. It is a map text: an attempt to organize Netist teachings about nested cycles, the toroidal return of reality, and the way all forms arise, develop, reflect, dissolve, and begin again.
Allegorical meaning
A revised chart of many wheels turning inside one another, drawn so the traveler can see where one rhythm sits inside a greater rhythm.
Extended meaning
The text begins from the claim that existence is not linear. It names cycles at multiple scales: string, quark, subatomic, atomic, cellular, multicellular, zoological, anthropogenic, guardian, integration, neter, ennead, planetary, universal, cosmic, chaos, and primordial. It also presents the cycles as nested within a toroidal flow centered on Zeru, the still point or source around which motion turns. The public glossary should treat Cycles New as a source document in development. Its value is organizational: it gathers cycle teachings into one map that can be refined, corrected, and cross-linked as the corpus matures.
This entry should stay transparent: Cycles New is a manuscript title and writing map. Do not turn it into inflated doctrine language.
Usage
Used when referring to the updated cycles manuscript, the Cycle Ladder source material, or the development history of Netist cosmology pages.
Ritual usage
Not a ritual term. It may be used as study material before cycle meditation, seasonal observance, or work on the Sacred Cycles of Existence.
Science correspondence
The text makes bridge-science comparisons to string theory, particle formation, cellular organization, ecology, stellar cycles, cosmology, and complex systems. Those comparisons need careful review term by term before being presented as scientific claims.
