Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Chapel of the Living God (GLoGtober 2024)

Sacred Body Horror for GLoGtober.

On entry into a Chapel of the Living God most visitors will first be in awe of the hundreds of Beneficent Saints lining the walls, smiling down from the rafters, whispering their rapturous chants and cloaked in woven gold. Older Chapels are said to be so filled with Beneficents that their very roofs and shrines are upheld by smiling, chanting saints- gold-flecked skin and swirling golden irises.

Kris-3d
Feast days and memorials will usually see families visiting with and caring for their relatives that have become Beneficents, cleaning their skin and making offerings of their favorite foods. I have even heard of some sects that allow families to take their Beneficent out for the day to visit and bless each of their households before returning them into the care of the Chapel once more. 

The two other most significant features of your average Chapel of the Living God are the Supplication Basin, where appeals are made to the Living God in the presence of the oldest Beneficents of the Chapel, and the closed off Ritual Chambers, where the priests perform the Benefaction Sacrament.

Entei Ryu

Most are familiar with the general practice of Benefaction as a means of ritual preservation and recognition of services to the Living God, however the details aren't well understood by those outside the faith. The history of Benefaction goes back to the early days of the Living God, who would bless their chosen as Avatars that would wield a fraction of the Living God's power against their enemies. The saying holds true, however, that absolute power corrupts absolutely. After a time, Avatars would begin to be corrupted by the Sacrament as it grew and warped their bodies and minds with unfathomable power. Eventually, the Living God introduced the practice of Benefaction as a means of preventing Corrupted Avatars from wreaking havoc. 

Depending on the suitability of an Avatar candidate, they are assigned a date for their Benefaction. Great heroes of the Living God are known to have borne the Sacrament for years on end, though most last a month or a week. Once the date is reached, the Avatar returns to a Chapel where the priests ritually sever their limbs and burn them, then wrapping the strands of the Sacrament that remain around their torso into a golden cloth. Now a Beneficent Saint, they are put under the care of the Chapel- or transferred to their home chapel- where they will be cared for eternally. 

What's Going On?

The Living God is a hivemind organism that lives in the bodies of the Beneficent Saints. In the form of the Sacrament, it is a bundle of carefully grown tendrils that are ingested by candidates. Over time, it grows in the candidate and grant it extreme powers of strength and agility as the tendrils reinforce the candidate's natural body. As the growth progresses, the Living God and the candidate begin to act as one- however eventually the Living God will overtake the host where it then risks severing from the hivemind and growing its own- something like a sub-cult. Knowing this unfortunate feature of its evolution, the Living God uses ritual and tradition to curtail its Avatars early- maintaining its existence in the body of the Saint and allowing it to continue to grow. 

Evgeny Romanov
These facts are known by some of the highest of the clergy of the Living Saint- who maintain that these abilities could only be those of a God. Their God is tangible and, if it needs their service, then they will carry it in their body and become its lever upon the world.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Knifepoint Horror

Smaller posts for awhile! Finally not procrastinating and spending more time slaving away at the programming chisel, amateurishly trying to rip the form free from the marble block it's trapped in. 

I am very, very picky about podcasts that I listen to. Partly this is because the main times that I consume podcasts affects what I'm listening to. For example:

Driving: Anything below but particularly: If Books Could Kill, Bad Books for Bad People, Radiolab, Behind the Bastards, Fear of a Black Dragon, Pretending to be People, Into the Megadungeon, Ologies, etc.

Hiking: Lore, Mayfair Watchers Society, Modes of Thought in Anterran Literature, the Magnus Archives, the Silt Verses, the White Vault, etc.

While falling asleep: Exploring Series, Acephale, Knifepoint Horror, the Wrong Station 

My "falling asleep podcasts" are, barring the Exploring Series, exclusively horror themed and have been finely selected for three qualities.

1. Consistency of audio volume. If it maintains the same general volume over an episode then it's a keeper.

2. Paucity of advertisements. I don't know what happened recently, but more and more advertisements on podcasts have been maliciously raising their volume over the general volume of the episode it seems, which is annoying. 

3. Unique Horror (Mostly). The three main contenders here, Acephale, Knifepoint Horror, and the Wrong Station generally offer stories that I have not heard before. 

Best of the Best

In particular I have to shout out to Knifepoint Horror as the best horror podcast I have been listening to this year. I have listened to it for several years, but this year in particular I did a great deal of hiking and driving finally actively listened to the entire catalogue and on a re-listen I finally started to appreciate these tales. 

Soren Narnia, the author of the stories, the podcast creator, and the main voice in all but the earliest of episodes weaves a variety of tales that usually wind a nebulous wandering tale through horror and mystery. Each story is very minimal in audio effects and uses a singular narration, they're all by one person. There's no guarantee of getting closure on these tales, some of them end rather abruptly, some of them wind out over the hour or so, and some have satisfying resolutions, but each one still succeeds in that draw in of Soren's narration as he tells a strange story. I highly recommend the podcast and in particular here are my favorite episodes. You don't need to listen to anything in order*, so don't worry about that. 

  • Let No One Walk Beside Her: Absolutely unique in the podcast, there's nothing else like this horrific, fantastical tale of survival, winter, and magic
  • Colony: A tale of years and a bright community's transformation, told by an outsider
  • The Crack: Unsuspecting, a student joins a silent group meditation hike and experiences a terror of geography and humanity 
  • Twelve Tiny Cabins: A student finds a campground mysteriously and suddenly abandoned. Later, they interview a professor about the writer's retreat that had been abandoned and what they saw.
  • Occupiers: A 19th century story about what stalks the streets of occupied Moscow.
  • Digs: The narrated notes of someone moving into a strange apartment and what they experience there.
  • A Convergence in Wintertime: Tales of treasure bring several different groups together at a critical moment in a deadly environment.

There's more but as I scrolled through my notes just now I started to realize I would end up listing most of the episodes in the catalogue! So, if you want some quiet, wandering narration and mystery then definitely check out Knifepoint Horror.