The Inversion: Remembering True Orientation.
- Dec 31
- 2 min read
Updated: Jan 1
This teaching explores a feeling many carry quietly within themselves: the sense that the world does not move as it should, that direction, meaning, and truth have somehow been turned upside down. In the Codex of the Red Sun, this is known as The Inversion.

The Feeling of Inversion
From an early age, there can be a knowing that something feels reversed. East does not feel like East. North does not feel like North. What is labeled “forward” feels like retreat, and what is called “progress” feels like disconnection.
This sensation is not confusion. It is remembrance.
It is the inner awareness that the world has been rotated away from its natural alignment, and that the systems we are taught do not always reflect the living order of creation.
The Map of Control
History shows that control was not only imposed on land, but on orientation itself. Maps were redrawn. Directions were reordered. Sacred calendars were replaced. By placing themselves “on top,” colonizing systems redefined what was central and what was peripheral.
When orientation is inverted, perception follows. The way people understand space, time, and meaning begins to shift away from lived reality and toward imposed structure.
The Cosmic Truth
In ancestral and sacred science, directions are not abstract lines on paper. They are energetic flows.
East is defined by the rising Sun, not by a diagram
North, South, and West follow cycles of sky, land, and memory
Above and Below are not merely physical, but spiritual and ancestral dimensions
What feels “backwards” is often the tension between imposed systems and the original cosmic orientation.
The Revelation
The codex teaches that inversion reaches beyond maps. It touches language, morality, time, and truth itself. What is life-giving is often dismissed, while what is destructive is normalized.
Yet the inner compass cannot be fully erased.
The soul remembers direction not by instruction, but by alignment.
The Path Forward
The calling of the Red Sun is restoration—not through conflict, but through realignment.
To remember the true East of the rising Sun.
To return to natural cycles of time.
To listen again to the orientation of spirit and Earth.
By reclaiming orientation, we begin to dissolve the inversion and move back toward harmony, balance, and coherence with Divine and natural law.
Reflection
This teaching invites quiet contemplation rather than immediate answers. It asks each reader to notice where their inner compass points, and where imposed systems may have pulled them away from their own sense of direction.








Comments