Life Iken's definitions
Definition
• The active and personal removal of a grievance a real or imagined wrong through direct effort, bypassing third-party or compensatory systems.
• A soul-deep commitment to restoring moral and physical balance by one who has caused harm, ensuring the repair is as personal as the error.
Etymology
• Ab- (Latin): Away from — Signifying a movement away from external judgment or cold, third-party mediation.
• -juc- (Latin juvare): To help/support/delight — Shifting the focus from jud- (judgment) to the active "help" or "righting" of a situation.
• -ation (Suffix): The process of — Marking the act as a deliberate, ongoing action.
• The active and personal removal of a grievance a real or imagined wrong through direct effort, bypassing third-party or compensatory systems.
• A soul-deep commitment to restoring moral and physical balance by one who has caused harm, ensuring the repair is as personal as the error.
Etymology
• Ab- (Latin): Away from — Signifying a movement away from external judgment or cold, third-party mediation.
• -juc- (Latin juvare): To help/support/delight — Shifting the focus from jud- (judgment) to the active "help" or "righting" of a situation.
• -ation (Suffix): The process of — Marking the act as a deliberate, ongoing action.
Nuance: Abjucation vs. Restitution
While restitution is often a legal or financial obligation imposed by an outside authority, abjucation is a voluntary, self-initiated process. It requires the individual to put their own hands and heart into the repair, acknowledging that a "check" cannot fix a "soul-deep" tear in the social fabric.
Examples:
In Practice: "If a Practitioner fails or causes harm (physical or structural), they must perform Abjucation—a direct, personal, and soul-deep effort to restore the balance through repair and acknowledgement of the error.
In Philosophy: "True justice recognizes that harm cannot be 'paid off'; it must be 'abjucated' through the direct energy and presence of the one responsible."
While restitution is often a legal or financial obligation imposed by an outside authority, abjucation is a voluntary, self-initiated process. It requires the individual to put their own hands and heart into the repair, acknowledging that a "check" cannot fix a "soul-deep" tear in the social fabric.
Examples:
In Practice: "If a Practitioner fails or causes harm (physical or structural), they must perform Abjucation—a direct, personal, and soul-deep effort to restore the balance through repair and acknowledgement of the error.
In Philosophy: "True justice recognizes that harm cannot be 'paid off'; it must be 'abjucated' through the direct energy and presence of the one responsible."
by Life Iken March 8, 2026
Get the Abjucation mug.(Noun) The philosophical belief that true cognitive origins are "removed from the possibility of being stolen" and can only be understood by transcending physical reality; the fundamental acceptance that we cannot know our true cognitive and conscious origin without first fully transending our physical reality. That is to say, by allowing the cognitive release of our substance: death of body.
"A core belief in Declepticism is that the death of body is the freeing of spirit."
Etymology
See: Decleptic
Etymology
See: Decleptic
by Life Iken March 8, 2026
Get the Declepticism mug.1. (Noun) A blissful abyss; a state of infinite, safe, and peaceful depth that exists beyond current human cognitive conception.
2. The experience of finding total serenity within the vast "unknown" or the void.
Etymology:
A portmanteau of "abyss" (from Greek abyssos: bottomless) and "bliss" (from Old English blis: perfect happiness).
2. The experience of finding total serenity within the vast "unknown" or the void.
Etymology:
A portmanteau of "abyss" (from Greek abyssos: bottomless) and "bliss" (from Old English blis: perfect happiness).
"The vast, unknown state of the afterlife can be meaningfully articulated through the term 'ablyss'."
"In the deepest state of meditation, he moved past the fear of the void and entered a state of pure ablyss."
"In the deepest state of meditation, he moved past the fear of the void and entered a state of pure ablyss."
by Life Iken March 1, 2026
Get the Ablyss mug.(Adj.) Inherently subjective and private; incapable of being fully measured or understood from an external perspective. Unlike traditional encryption, which is applied, a decleptic experience is secure by its very nature (e.g., the "qualia" of a dream).
Etymology
A 21st-century neologism, coined from the following parts:
• de-: A Latin prefix signifying "away from," "apart," "removal of," or "reversal."
• -cleptic: A creative suffix blending two Greek roots:
• Greek kryptós (κρυπτός), meaning "hidden, secret" (the root of cryptic).
• Greek kléptein (κλέπτειν), meaning "to steal" (the root of kleptomania).
Etymology
A 21st-century neologism, coined from the following parts:
• de-: A Latin prefix signifying "away from," "apart," "removal of," or "reversal."
• -cleptic: A creative suffix blending two Greek roots:
• Greek kryptós (κρυπτός), meaning "hidden, secret" (the root of cryptic).
• Greek kléptein (κλέπτειν), meaning "to steal" (the root of kleptomania).
"Consciousness is a decleptic phenomenon; no amount of brain scanning can reveal the true qualia of another's subjective thoughts or experience."
"No matter how advanced our technology becomes, the way I experience the color blue remains decleptic—it is a private sanctuary of my own consciousness that no one else can truly enter or 'steal'."
"No matter how advanced our technology becomes, the way I experience the color blue remains decleptic—it is a private sanctuary of my own consciousness that no one else can truly enter or 'steal'."
by Life Iken March 1, 2026
Get the Decleptic mug.