People lose mass over time.
As growth hormone wanes, so too does the amplified vitality of youth. The first instinct is to cut back, to burn the flab, to streamline. But what we call excess was once a feature—a byproduct of abundance, vigor, life. Now it drifts downward, closer to the gravity well. Closer to the floor.
Trimming the excess only shrinks the problem—it does not solve it.
The core issue is deeper: tissue building, repair, and vitality have been demoted in favor of survival and function. If we strip ourselves of the very nutrients and demands that once forged us, do we really become better—or simply less?
Has the drive left us? Or has it been refined?
Every part of the body, mind, and being must be challenged, expressed, tested. Without that push to higher levels, the purpose of our form dissolves in the static storm of data and code. Meaning is not passively found—it must be forged under pressure.
Every nutrient must be present—in strength and surplus. And stress must be met with greater response, replenishment, and resolve. Energy must answer the call of depletion.
“I desire!”
But to be what?
And the answer is clear. Perhaps the only thing ever worth being—
You.
You must become You again.
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