“I hear your command, and I know what you promise. I feel your fire—I know how easily it could be mine. But I choose my people. And I will not burn this city.”
The Priest can choose mercy over dogma. The Shaman can silence a dark omen. The Druid can shield a single sapling against the coming gale. The Warlock can bend a hollow patron’s hunger toward a light cause. Each stands on a knife's edge between two worlds: the crushing power behind them, and the fragile world before them.
The most profound act isn’t summoning the storm—it’s refusing to let the storm dictate the direction. Power only finds meaning when it is constrained by will. Otherwise, it is merely momentum. Momentum is power with no one home; it is a landslide, indifferent and inevitable. Will is the friction. It is the thing that turns against the grain. It costs something to hold back the tide, and that cost is exactly why it matters.
If will gives power its meaning, then beings without resistance—gods, immortals, eldritch horrors—are never truly alive. They are just cosmic momentum in motion. Perhaps the most human act isn’t choosing good over evil. It is choosing defiance over inevitability.

































