Książka Fold World Dirk Von Herzog

Fold World

The Hidden Law of the Fold - The Tortoise and the Hare

Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Oczekiwana premiera
Wydanie 09. 06. 2026
64.38
What if The Tortoise and the Hare was never merely a lesson about pride, laziness, discipline, or pe...

Informacje o książce

Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
162
EAN
9798234102157
Enbook ID
52818211
Waga
238
Wymiary
156 x 235 x 9

Pełny opis

What if The Tortoise and the Hare was never merely a lesson about pride, laziness, discipline, or persistence? What if the old fable was hiding a deeper map of earthly life itself?

In Fold World, Dirk Von Herzog reimagines The Tortoise and the Hare as a spiritual and metaphysical law of incarnation. The hare becomes the speed of knowing: revelation, recognition, intuition, signal, and the inward flash of truth before proof appears. The tortoise becomes the speed of embodiment: body, time, matter, structure, consequence, and the slow labor by which truth becomes livable.

Between them lies the fold: the charged interval where longing is born, manifestation lags, love arrives before readiness, and calling is felt before the world can support it.

This book gives language to one of the deepest and most universal human experiences: the strange distance between what is known inwardly and what has not yet become visible, touchable, or livable outwardly. It explores why truth often arrives before form, why time can feel like delay and still be part of embodiment, and why the visible world often seems late to what the soul already knows.

Through clear, lyrical, and accessible spiritual philosophy, Fold World explores longing, manifestation, timing, love, vocation, destiny, patience, discernment, false escapes, and the difficult art of living at the seam between revelation and form. It is not a book about forcing reality to obey desire. It is a book about understanding delayed embodiment without losing faith in what is real.

For anyone who has ever felt ahead of their own life, this book offers a language for the ache. For anyone who has carried truth slowly into form, it offers dignity for the labor. And for anyone trying to understand why life so often lags behind the soul, Fold World offers a simple but profound law:

Knowing arrives first. Embodiment follows. The fold bridges them.

At its heart, this is a book about the hidden law of delay, the dignity of the slow, and the great earthly miracle: not merely that truth can be known, but that, in time, it can be lived.