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The Recognition Journey
Coles
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The Recognition Journey in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $54.99

Coles
The Recognition Journey in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $54.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
This is not a conventional narrative. It is a mythic reconstruction of a specific experience: recognition that precedes reason, connection that destabilizes identity, and desire that operates outside conscious control.
The Recognition Journey follows the encounter between two archetypal forces—the Stag and the Fawn—across a sequence of symbolic seasons. Each phase captures a shift in state: the initial rupture of recognition, the inflation of ego, the discipline of distance, the fracture of silence, and the temporary merging that precedes withdrawal.
The text is written as a codex. Astrology, archetypes, and ritual language are used as frameworks to describe internal processes: nervous system activation, projection, resistance, and transformation. What appears as romance is treated as a mechanism—one that exposes what is hidden, strips away constructed identity, and forces confrontation with the self.
The dynamic is not resolved. It evolves.
This is a study of:
recognition without explanation
desire without expression
connection without stability
transformation through tension
The Stag does not chase. The Fawn does not fully yield. Between them, a field forms—intense, silent, and destabilizing. The narrative tracks how both are reshaped by proximity, absence, and the inability to return to who they were before the encounter.
This is not a conventional narrative. It is a mythic reconstruction of a specific experience: recognition that precedes reason, connection that destabilizes identity, and desire that operates outside conscious control.
The Recognition Journey follows the encounter between two archetypal forces—the Stag and the Fawn—across a sequence of symbolic seasons. Each phase captures a shift in state: the initial rupture of recognition, the inflation of ego, the discipline of distance, the fracture of silence, and the temporary merging that precedes withdrawal.
The text is written as a codex. Astrology, archetypes, and ritual language are used as frameworks to describe internal processes: nervous system activation, projection, resistance, and transformation. What appears as romance is treated as a mechanism—one that exposes what is hidden, strips away constructed identity, and forces confrontation with the self.
The dynamic is not resolved. It evolves.
This is a study of:
recognition without explanation
desire without expression
connection without stability
transformation through tension
The Stag does not chase. The Fawn does not fully yield. Between them, a field forms—intense, silent, and destabilizing. The narrative tracks how both are reshaped by proximity, absence, and the inability to return to who they were before the encounter.





















