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Super + Clarity = S(uper) + (C)larity = Slarity

Singularity to Eternity(Plurality)
Nothing to Everything
Small to Big
Start to End
Dark to Light
Chaos to Order
Ignorance to Enlightenment
Bad to Good

Where the mind becomes matter,
where dreams become reality,
where the impossible becomes inevitable.

It's the opposites that come together to bring meaning to each other.

Derived from Singularity & Eternity, Unity & Diversity, Oneness & All, Nonduality & Advaitha.

Slarity is a philosophy, its a Belief:
We believe, if we can imagine it, we can innovate it.
This is who we are, this is what we do - Imagine Innovate.
Super Clarity - Slarity
Slarity by Slarity June 28, 2020
The new name for Singularity
The word Singularity is too long for humans

Legend has it, if a great & important name doesn't start small, it will eventually become one, like:

Coca-Cola became - Coke

The Huffington post became - Huffpost
Instagram became - Insta
Facebook became - FB
Pete's Super Submarines became - Subway

We humans like it simple and easy
Thus Slarity was born
Shorter & easier to say - Sounds like Clarity but with an S instead of C
Singularity made more precise, condensed & Clear
Singularity x (Super+Clarity) = Salrity

Ok Bye!
Slarity by Slarity May 30, 2021

Solarity 

1. Referring to a person(s) feeling of solitude or of being alone*. 2. The feeling or emotion one experiences when completely alone* usually in a safe and/or natural environment.
*not in a state of being stranded, lost or exiled.
I enjoy the solarity of being home alone. The solarity of the desert is quite pleasing.
Solarity by mbracken1976 January 13, 2017

Solarity 

Word to describe a person that respects woman.
Fuck! That solarity just stole my girl.
Solarity by Keffree February 4, 2018

Alzheimer's Clarity Moment 

When a person with middle/end-stage Alzheimer's has a brief moment where they snap out of their memory loss. It only lasts a few seconds at most, and is very bittersweet for everyone involved.
Pamela and her friend, Maureen went to the nursing home to visit Pamela's 83-year-old mother, Edna, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease four years prior.

When the two gals got to Pamela's mother, they found her in a wheelchair staring aimlessly at the wall. But when Maureen tried to introduce herself, Pamela's mother had an Alzheimer's Clarity Moment.

"Hello, Maureen" she said, in a soft, barely-audible voice.

Ecstatic, Pamela quickly asked her, "Mom, do you recognize me?"

"Yes," Pamela's mom said after a brief pause. "Yes, I do recognize you...Pam...ela..." And then she reverted to staring at the wall, her sudden moment of clarity forever lost.

Pamela began sobbing, while Maureen did her best to console her friend. That was the last time they saw her mother before she succumbed to the disease.