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summary: you're Teddy's babysitter who Remus is absolutely not head over heels over... but what happens when his ex-wife and mother of his kid shows up one day after being gone for six years?
pairing: singledad!Remus x babysitter!reader
tags: long afk but worth it i promise, muggle!au, modern!au, single dad remus, age!gap sorta (reader is 24 and remus is 32), reader is lonely and so is remus:(, angst, happy ending & Tonks slander for the plot im so sorry i love her i swear.
The first time you babysat Teddy Lupin he bit you. He bit you hard.
You'd think a six year old would be a tiny bit more mature when trying to express big big feelings but oh well...
The first time you properly met Remus Lupin, he was leaning against the bathroom doorway while you searched his medicine cabinet for a bandage, in need of it for small little bite-sized cuts, courtesy of his son's surprisingly sharp teeth.
"I promise he doesn't have rabies." he says, looking extremely apologetic as he hands you a small box of dinosaur band-aids
You looked down at the cartoon triceratops smiling up at you.
"Sorry, we only have these and I keep them in my room because Teddy likes to put them on everything."
"Well," you said, peeling open the Band-Aid. "At least he has good taste."
"In band-aids?"
"In victims."
For the first time since you'd arrived, Remus laughed and the sound surprised both of you.
Teddy had his father's laugh, you'd come to learn. It escaped them in stages: a huff through his nose, a smile he tried and failed to suppress, and then a laugh proper, warm and low and wonderfully unguarded.
Remus thought you'd quit after Teddy bit you, instead, you taught him all afternoon how to express overwhelming joy through words and hugs. He hired you on the spot.
As it turned out, working for Remus Lupin fit surprisingly well into your schedule. He lived only fifteen minutes from campus and taught there himself, though from the other side of the lectern and thankfully not in classes corresponding your major. Getting from your classes to his house was only a fifteen-minute drive.
After the toddler had scared six nannies already, Remus the atheist thought of going to a church and say thanks to The Man Himself when his son seemed so accepting of you. None of the others had lasted more than a month after some incidents... like the one time where Teddy learned that pretending to cry guaranteed attention and subsequently produced tears on command whenever vegetables appeared on his plate, or when he convinced a nanny he had swallowed a coin.
He had not.
He simply wanted to know what happened when people thought you had.
And there came you.
A woman in her mid-twenties, almost done with college and desperately in need of cash.
Somehow, you possessed the extraordinary ability to turn Teddy Lupin into a less unhinged version of himself simply by speaking to him as though he were a thinking human being. A rather radical approach for any of the other babysitters that had had the misfortune of looking after him.
The first month, Teddy stopped biting people.
The second month, he started waiting by the living room window for your car.
By the third, he knew your class schedule better than you did.
"You're late." He accused, arms tightly around himself to show he was clearly furious.
You checked your watch. "I am four minutes early."
"You were eight minutes earlier yesterday."
"That's not how being late works, bubba."
Teddy narrowed his eyes. You narrowed yours right back. Then he broke into a fit of giggles and forced you to play hide n' seek with him for the third time that week.
One rainy afternoon, you found yourself sitting cross-legged on the living room floor helping Teddy build a cardboard castle from old delivery boxes his dad had abandoned months ago.
The structure was ugly. Dangerously unstable. And somehow required seventeen rolls of tape his dad would absolutely need at some point of the apocalypse he had bought them for.
"Who lives there?" you asked, taping one of the makeshift windows to the side of the castle. You could've pursued architecture.
"A dragon."
"Only a dragon? A single one?"
"A dragon and me." He nods, like it's obvious, like it's a universal truth.
You nodded solemnly, catching one of the falling pieces from the roof. "Fair enough."
Teddy considered this. He looked at you from head to toe, still wearing the princess hat you made for yourself with cardboard and glittery pink markers. "And you." He decides
Your hands paused. "Oh."
"And Dad, I guess."
"How generous of you." You smile
Teddy shrugged. "The dragon likes you."
Remus noticed it before you did.
The way Teddy reached for you first whenever he was upset. The way he shouted your name the moment he got a good grade. The way he insisted on saving half his desserts for you. The way the house seemed fuller whenever you were in it.
Warmer. Louder. Happier.
Ever since Tonks had left not long after Teddy was born, the house had felt different. Quieter. Not in the literal sense; if anything, Teddy seemed determined to produce enough noise for three people. But there was an emptiness to it all the same. A second mug never taken down from the cabinet. A side of the bed that remained untouched. Conversations that ended before they began because there was nobody to have them with. At first, Remus had noticed it everywhere.
In the silence that greeted him after putting Teddy to sleep.
In the groceries he no longer bought.
In the absence of someone asking how his day had been.
Then life carried on, as it tended to do. Teddy grew. The laundry piled up. Bills had to be paid. Homework from both his son and his students needed checking. Somewhere between surviving and parenting, the loneliness stopped feeling like an intruder and settled into something more permanent. A piece of furniture. An old ache. The sort of thing he only noticed when it wasn't truly there.
Which was perhaps why your arrival caught him so off guard: You filled space without trying to.
Suddenly there was laughter coming from the living room when he got home from work. Someone stealing the good pens from his desk. Someone else reminding Teddy to brush his teeth. Someone sitting at the kitchen counter while he made dinner, telling him about a professor who couldn't work the projector.
The house wasn't less messy or more manageable. If anything, it was louder than ever. But it felt alive again.
One evening, after putting Teddy to bed, you found Remus standing in the kitchen nursing a mug of tea. "He's asleep?" he asks, pulling the little tea bag in and out of the water of his cup, the scent of camomile filling the room.
"Barely." You say with a groan, sitting on the kitchen island with a small thud.
This had become a ritual, of sorts. Talking with Remus about both of your days, or your lives, before he awkwardly slipped the fifty dollar bill across the counter and you slipped out the door to go home.
"He asked for three stories?"
"Four."
Remus winced. "My condolences, love."
You laughed. He smiled.
And then neither of you looked away quite as quickly as you should have. It lasted only a second. Maybe two. He should be grabbing his wallet instead of staring at you like a creep, he thought briefly. But something shifted. Not enough to name. Not enough to acknowledge. Just enough to notice. Just enough to remember.
The first school event you attended happened entirely by accident. Or at least that's what you told yourself.
"Dad can't come to my school thing." Teddy delivered the news with all the gravity of someone announcing a death in the family and the hopefulness of asking for extra candy. You glanced up from his math worksheet spread across the kitchen table. "What do you mean he can't come?"
"He has a meeting at his school." He sighs, resting his chubby cheek in his hand as he scribbles down the page instead of writing actual numbers.
"Oh."
Teddy stared. You stared back. The silence stretched.
"Okay?"
"It's my assembly." Teddy said in the whiniest of tones, spinning around in his chair without taking his eyes off of you, turning his head every time his back faced you
"I know- Bubba, you're going to get dizzy and vomit those dino nuggets, stop."
He stops himself, his little hands clawing at the kitchen island to make himself sit straight again. "You have to come!"
You blinked. "I absolutely do not."
"You do!"
"Teddy."
"You're my emergency contact." He says in an attempt to somehow tie you into a school assembly.
"Your dad is your emergency contact." Busted. Your smirk is proud, like you defeated a debate professor rather than a six year old.
"You're my second emergency contact." He looked unbearably pleased with himself. As though he'd just discovered a legal loophole.
You sighed. "That is not how this works."
"It is if I start crying." He grins.
"You wouldn't."
His eyes immediately began watering.
"Oh, for God's sake- fine, fine, fine!"
The assembly took place on a Thursday morning. You had skipped a lecture to be there. A decision you absolutely weren't regretting as you sat in an uncomfortable folding chair surrounded by parents.
Definitely not. Not even a little.
The gymnasium was packed. Children buzzed with excitement. Teachers ran around looking exhausted. A little girl dressed as a sunflower was already crying and smudging her seed makeup.
It was chaos.
"Teddy Lupin?" a woman sitting beside you asked.
You looked up. "Yeah!"
The woman smiled. "Oh, you're his mother."
The words hit you so unexpectedly that your brain short-circuited.
"No."
"No?" The woman looked awfully confused.
"No." You laughed awkwardly. "I'm not."
"Oh."
You should have corrected her.cYou should have explained. Babysitter. Family friend. Anything.
Instead, your head drifted toward the stage. Toward Teddy. Toward the little paper crown sitting crookedly on his head. Toward the seat beside you. Empty and reserved for Remus.
A faculty emergency had kept him away.
You'd watched him apologize to Teddy all morning.
Watched Teddy pretend not to care.
Watched Remus look heartbroken anyway.
"It's complicated," you decided on.
The woman nodded with a careful smile as if that explained everything.
Maybe it did.
The moment Teddy stepped onto the stage, he found you. Not his teacher. Not his classmates. You.
His entire face lit up. He waved both arms enthusiastically and showed off the crown you had made him days before.
You waved back. A teacher immediately pushed his hands down and he looked bothered but then... The performance began.
Teddy missed half his cues. Forgot two lines. Knocked over a cardboard tree. And somehow still managed to be the most amazing thing you had ever seen. You laughed so hard your stomach hurt and he laughed with you. By the end, you had nearly two hundred photos on your phone.
Half of them blurry. All of them precious.
Remus called before you even reached your car with Teddy in hand, a huge ice cream on his as you walked in the school's parking lot.
"How was it?"
You smiled. "You owe me another fifty dollars."
"What?" You can hear the smile on his voice.
"I sat through forty-five minutes of second graders singing off-key, I'm entitled to financial compensation."
A pause. Then:
"So it was good?"
You could practically hear the hope in his voice. You thought of the photograph you took earlier, now on your main wallpaper.
Teddy, grinning proudly from the stage. Paper crown crooked. Missing front tooth. The happiest, most perfect kid in the world.
"It was perfect."
The silence on the other end lasted a moment longer than it should have. "Thank you." Something in his voice made your chest ache.
"It wasn't a big deal, Remus."
"It was."
You leaned against your car as Teddy got inside. Suddenly unsure what to do with your hands. "What are you doing now?" he asked.
"Dropping Teddy at campus and then home... why?"
Another pause. Then: "Teddy wants to celebrate."
You laughed.
"Celebrate what?"
"This morning he said something about surviving elementary theatre."
"Fair."
"Would you...?" The hesitation surprised you. "Would you like to come to dinner?"
You should have said no.
You had reading to do.
Laundry.
Assignments.
A life outside of the Lupins.
Instead— "Only if Teddy picks the restaurant." Remus groaned.
"Oh no."
"What's wrong?" You frown, thinking for one terrible moment that dinner plans were cancelled.
"He likes that dinosaur-themed place."
"You say that like it's bad." You smile, getting inside the car and buckling Teddy's seatbelt.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Remus said gravely, "she's encouraging him!"
You spent dinner watching the performance's videos, laughing hysterically at Teddy making excuses for stepping on another boy's feet while dancing and how the choreography was super tough.
Much later, neither of you would be able to say exactly when you stopped feeling like Teddy's babysitter.
Only that, somehow, somewhere between dinosaur bandages, cardboard castles and bedtime stories, you had become part of the family. And nobody seemed particularly interested in giving you back.
Summer turned into autumn.
Autumn turned into winter.
And somewhere in between, you stopped knocking.
It had happened after Teddy came down with a stomach bug and Remus got stuck in traffic on the way home from campus. He'd handed you a spare key the next morning with a mumbled, "Just in case." You'd accepted it without much thought.
Months later, it still hung from your keychain.
"Technically," Remus had said once, watching Teddy color at the kitchen table, "you're only supposed to use it for emergencies."
Teddy didn't even look up from his crayons. "She lives here."
You nearly choked on your coffee. "I absolutely do not."
"You have a key."
"That doesn't mean I live here, Bubba. I got my own place-."
"You have pajamas."
"They're for sleepovers when you're too much of a baby to sleep alone when your dad's late!" You laugh
"You have a toothbrush." He doesn't take the bait. He will tolerate being called a baby if it is to prove a point.
"Teddy."
"You have your own mug." You opened your mouth. Then closed it again. Because annoyingly enough, the little traitor was right.
The mug sat beside the coffee machine every morning; a chipped blue thing with tiny stars painted around the rim. Nobody remembered how it had become yours. One day it simply had.
Much like the cardigan hanging over the back of the couch, the spare phone charger Remus had bought for you that now rested permanently plugged into the kitchen outlet. The blanket Teddy insisted belonged to you during movie nights. Little pieces of yourself scattered throughout the house.
Evidence. Proof.
Signs of a life quietly intertwining with theirs. Not that anyone seemed particularly concerned about it. Especially not Remus.
One evening, after a particularly miserable exam, you let yourself into the house and immediately dropped your backpack onto the floor.
"I'm dropping out."
"Hi, sweetheart."
Remus looked up from where he stood at the stove.
"You didn't even ask what happened." You groan, taking off your shoes and padding inside.
"You say you're dropping out at least twice a month." Remus laughs, handing you tea that was already waiting for you in the blue starry mug.
"I mean it this time."
"You meant it last time."
"And the time before that." Teddy chimes in.
"Exactly."
You narrowed your eyes. He smiled into his tea.
Teddy looked up from the table. "I think she's... bluffing!" You had taught him that word a month ago when he heard you singing a song and asked what 'bluffing' meant.
"Thank you, Theodore." Remus hums
"You're welcome."
And for a brief, stupid moment, standing there in your socks with your backpack abandoned by the door and the smell of dinner filling the kitchen, you forgot this wasn't your home. The realization came later.
Alone in your apartment, laying in bed and staring at the ceiling.
Thinking about the way Teddy had absent-mindedly reached for your hand while telling a story. The way Remus always made enough tea for two. The way neither of them seemed surprised when you showed up anymore.
Looking back, perhaps that should have worried you.
The ease of it all.
The way you slipped into their lives and they slipped into yours.
The way none of it felt temporary anymore.
The doorbell rang on a Thursday afternoon, sunset already bleeding in the sky.
Teddy was halfway through explaining why dinosaurs would perform terribly in modern society when Remus got up to answer it. "Don't move," he told his son.
"I wasn't planning to."
"That's what you said before climbing onto the garage roof."
"I was trying to help the bird... it was one time."
"One time too many." You laughed into your mug.
Remus rolled his eyes affectionately before disappearing into the hallway. The conversation at the table continued for all of ten seconds.
Then it stopped.
Not because of anything you could hear. Because of what you couldn't.
No footsteps.
No greeting.
No door closing.
Just silence.
A strange, heavy sort of silence.
The kind that makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. You exchanged a glance with Teddy. He frowned.
Then, from the hallway—
"Dora" Remus said in a broken sigh.
"Hello, Remus."
A woman's voice. Soft and familiar. A tiny bit broken around the edges.
The mug slipped slightly in your hands. Something crashed to a halt in the other room. For a moment, nobody spoke.
Then Teddy's chair scraped loudly against the floor. His eyes had gone impossibly wide as he ran to the hall.
"Dad?" The word hung in the air. A heartbeat later, another one followed. Small. Disbelieving. Hopeful.
"Mom?".
Remus' ex wife.
Teddy's mom.
It was hard to put an older face to the name. Remus had told you the whole story in one of your late-night kitchen conversations after a particularly harsh day at faculty, all broken and tired. A storm raged outside, and he basically forced you to stay there and use the couch. You'd found him sitting alone in the kitchen after midnight, grading papers with the thousand-yard stare of a man questioning every decision that had led him to academia.
"Bad essays?" you asked as you poured yourself some water.
"Worse."
You set your glass down beside him. "How bad?"
Remus looked up, grabbed the paper he was grading and read: "'The Industrial Revolution was important because industry was invented.'"
You winced. "That's rough."
"I nearly resigned." The laugh that followed faded quickly. He put down the pen and took off his glasses, running a hand through his sandy hair as he took a deep breath. Silence settled between you. Comfortable.
The kind that only existed after months of knowing someone.
Then, without really meaning to, your eyes drifted toward the photograph on the fridge. The same photograph you'd seen dozens of times.
A younger Remus. A baby Teddy. A woman with big eyes and pink hair.
"Was she funny?" The question escaped before you could stop it.
Remus followed your gaze. For a moment, he didn't answer.
Then... "Very."
You nodded then waited.
Eventually, he sighed. "You're curious."
"A little." you admit, the greenish water in your cup suddenly the most interesting thing in the room. God why did you have to be so nosy, the topic was clearly sensitive for the man and-
"Fair." He says before looking up "Her name's Nymphadora."
You immediately grimaced. "That's fucking criminal."
"It is." He laughs
"What kind of parent names a child Nymphadora?" I sigh
"The kind who hated her almost as much as she did."
That earned a genuine laugh. Then his expression softened. Not with longing. With memory. "She was loud."
You smiled. "Teddy had to get it from someone."
"Impossible not to notice when she entered a room." His fingers tapped absent-mindedly against the mug in front of him as he stared into the garden. "She loved Teddy."
You hesitated. Past tense. Loved.
Not loves.
Loved. The distinction settled heavily in your chest. "What happened?"
For a second, you thought he'd dodge the question like the many times Sirius made a joke about it during family dinners. Instead, he leaned back in his chair. Looking older suddenly. More tired.
"We had Teddy."
You waited. "And?"
"And she left." Just like that. No dramatic explanation. No elaborate story. Three words.
You frowned. "Just... left?"
"Pretty much." He scoffed but there was no anger in his voice. Which somehow made it worse.
"One day she told me she couldn't do it anymore." His eyes remained fixed on the table. "Couldn't do what?" You ask.
"Any of it... the house payment, the marriage, the responsibility."
You swallowed a small lump in your throat, scared to ask until you did "Teddy?"
A pause. Then: "Especially Teddy."
The words hit harder than they should have because they weren't cruel. Just honest. The honesty made them hurt.
"How old was he?"
"Six months."
You stared. Remus stared back into his tea.
"Some people aren't built for parenthood." You didn't know what to say. You were a dumb twenty something year old that could barely keep herself alive with campus meals and an awful sleep schedule. You couldn't judge the woman...
"So that's it?"
He laughed. A short, bitter thing. "No." The answer came immediately, almost still resentful. "No, that's not it."
For the first time that evening, genuine anger flashed across his face. Gone almost as quickly as it appeared. But it was there for the briefest second. "I spent years furious." The admission surprised you. Remus was a gentle man, in every sense of the word. He never yelled at Teddy even when he was in one of his moods, never cursed unless it was in good spirits and never once did you see him express anything but love and maybe, sometimes sadness. "I thought I'd done something wrong."
His jaw tightened. "I thought if I'd been a better husband she would've stayed."
The kitchen felt very quiet.
Then: "Eventually I realized it wasn't about me." A pause. "Or even about Teddy." Another. "She just didn't want this life." He says looking around at the house, his eyes fixated on Teddy's drawings hanging in the frigge.
You looked down at your tea.
Thought about the sleeping child upstairs. At the house built around you both. And for the first time, you understood why Remus looked so exhausted sometimes.
Because he'd spent years being both parents. Years picking up every piece she left behind.
"Do you hate her?" You mumble softly.
Remus was silent for a long time. Then he shook his head. "No." The answer sounded tired.
Not forgiving. Not yet. Just tired.
"I hate what happened." His eyes drifted toward the stairs. Toward Teddy's room. "I hate what it did to him."
A pause. "If she walked through that door tomorrow, I'd probably slam it in her face." You laughed softly.
"I'm serious."
"I know."
Another pause. Then: "But if Teddy wanted to see her..."
Remus closed his eyes briefly and you saw the fight leaving him all at once. "I'd figure it out."
And so that's why seeing this woman in the doorway, with Teddy clinging to her legs, surprised you so.
Remus was looking at the floor intently, breathing heavily, hand still in the door as Nymphadora walked inside and sat on the couch as Teddy hugged her. The sight makes your heart squeeze.
You remained rooted to your spot by the kitchen island as she finally acknowledged your presence. "Oh?" The single syllable nearly knocked the breath from your lungs.
You weren't stupid.
You knew exactly how this looked.
You were already in your pajamas curled up on a kitchen stool. A mug of tea cooling beside your phone as it charged from the wall outlet, your college bag rested carelessly beside the couch. The blanket draped over your lap belonged to the house. The blue, chipped mug in your hand did too. Slowly, painfully, you became aware of every trace of yourself scattered throughout the room.
The cardigan hanging over the back of a chair. The charger plugged into the kitchen wall. The half-finished crossword you'd abandoned on the coffee table.
Evidence.
Evidence everywhere.
The realization hit all at once. This wasn't your home. But God, it looked and felt like it was. Nymphadora's gaze swept across the room. Taking everything in. The tea. The blanket. The bag. You.
Something flickered across her face. Surprise. Confusion. Perhaps even understanding. You couldn't tell.
Suddenly you felt eighteen again. Awkward. Out of place. Caught doing something you weren't supposed to be doing and feeling incredibly embarassed about it.
"Teddy's babysitter." The words escaped before anyone could ask. You hated how quickly you'd said them. As though trying to justify your own existence. As though trying to explain why you were here.
Nymphadora blinked. Then smiled, a small one. Polite and distant. "Oh." The same thing she'd said before. Only this time it sounded different. You couldn't explain how, just that it did.
You looked at Teddy.
Then at Remus.
Remus still hadn't moved, and had barely spoken. The silence surrounding him felt strange. Heavy. Like a storm cloud sitting in the middle of the living room.
Nymphadora noticed too. Her smile faded slightly. "Hi, Remus."
Finally, his eyes lifted meeting hers for the first time. The room seemed to hold its breath. "Tonks."
Not Dora.
Not Nymphadora.
Not love.
Not anything affectionate.
Just Tonks.
The distance in a single syllable was almost impressive. For a moment, neither of them spoke. Years stretched silently between them. Then Teddy squeezed himself tighter against his mother's side. And whatever Remus had been about to say disappeared.
Because there it was.
The reason she was standing in his living room.
The reason he hadn't slammed the door.
The reason he probably never would.
Their son.
Of course you sleep in your place that night.
You stood, reached for your keys and your overnight bag. For the cardigan you'd left hanging over the couch weeks ago. For some reason, collecting your things felt different tonight. Like you were cleaning up after yourself. Like you were erasing evidence.
"Drive safe." Remus' voice caught you by surprise. You looked up and he was already holding the front door open.
The autumn air slipped inside. Cold against your skin.
"You too." The corner of his mouth twitched.
"I'm not driving anywhere."
"You never know." For a moment neither of you moved. The silence stretched. Not awkward.
You drove home in your pijamas and in spite of Teddy's pleas for you to stay to "meet his mommy together". The sentence made your blood boil and heart break at the same time. The sweet boy hadn't grown up with her, he didn't know her. He was just meeting her and it was the most heartbreakingly sad thing you had ever seen. How could he know her? And yet he loved her already.
The realization sat heavily in your chest during the drive home, not because Teddy was wrong but because he wasn't. She was his mother. Of course he wanted her. Of course he looked at her like she'd hung the moon. Of course he forgave her before she had even apologized. He was a child.
The next morning, you still went. Of course you did. Teddy had asked if you'd come back. You'd promised.
So you found yourself standing on the Lupins' doorstep shortly after ten in the morning with a bag of groceries balanced on your hip and a spare key in your pocket. The key felt heavier than usual. You knocked anyway out of habit.
The door swung open before you could use it. Teddy practically launched himself at you. "You came!"
You laughed as he nearly knocked you over. "I said I would."
"I know but sometimes adults lie."
"That's a concerning thing to say at eight in the morning."
"It's ten."
"Still concerning."
Teddy grinned then grabbed your hand and dragged you inside. The smile slipped from your face almost immediately. The kitchen smelled like pancakes, fresh ones. The dishes had already been washed. His favorite dinosaur cup had already been filled with juice.
And standing in the middle of it all was Nymphadora Tonks. As though she'd always belonged there. As though she'd never left.
"Oh!" she said brightly.
"Hi." You smiled automatically.
"Hi."
Teddy was already halfway through explaining something about velociraptors. Neither of you listened. For a moment, you simply stood there. Watching Nymphadora tying Teddy's shoelaces. Nymphadora reminding him to finish his breakfast. Nymphadora wiping syrup off his cheek.
Things you had done a hundred times. Things she should have been doing. The realization settled slowly.
Painfully like a bruise.
Nobody had asked you to leave. Nobody had told you that you weren't needed. And yet the space you'd occupied for years suddenly had an owner again.
You stayed for an hour. Maybe two.
Long enough to help Teddy build a blanket fort.
Long enough to laugh at one of his terrible jokes.
Long enough to realize you didn't know what you were supposed to do anymore.
When you finally stood to leave, Teddy frowned. "Where are you going?"
Home.
Nowhere.
Anywhere.
"I've got things to do."
"Like what?"
You opened your mouth.
Nothing came out. Because the truth was that college was out for winter break. You didn't have classes. You didn't have assignments. You didn't have work. You had planned on spending most of your vacation here. Movie nights and board games and helping Teddy build increasingly dangerous engineering projects. You hadn't realized how much of your life had quietly rearranged itself around theirs until now.
"Oh."
Teddy seemed unsatisfied by the answer. But Nymphadora smiled. "Let her go be a grown-up."
You laughed politely. Then left.
The drive home felt longer than it should have. The apartment felt smaller. Quieter. You spent three hours wandering aimlessly between rooms.
Started a book. Put it down.
Turned on the television. Turned it off.
Made tea and accidentally made enough for two. Forgot to drink both cups.
By two in the afternoon, you were considering taking a nap simply out of boredom when your phone rang. Remus.
You answered immediately.
"Hey."
A pause.
Then: "Please tell me you're free."
You sat upright. Something in his voice made your stomach drop.
"What happened?"
Another pause, longer this time.
When he finally spoke, he sounded exhausted.
"Teddy and Tonks had a fight."
You blinked. "A fight?" He's six years old how does he manage to-
"A spectacular one."
"What happened?"
Remus sighed heavily. "I think she tried to parent him."
"Oh."
"Yeah."
You winced. That explained everything. Teddy had never loved being told what to do from anyone who wasn't Remus. Or you. That aditional thought bothered you.
"Teddy yelled that she wasn't his mother." The words landed heavily. Painfully. You closed your eyes.
"Oh fuck."
Another silence.
Then: "He locked himself in his room." You were already reaching for your shoes. "And?"
"And apparently I'm raising a tiny dictator because he says he'll only come out if you talk to him." Your heart broke instantly somewhere between the front door and your car keys. Remus let out a tired breath. "He keeps asking for you."
And suddenly, for the first time all day, you knew exactly where you were supposed to be.
The drive to the Lupins' house took twelve minutes and you spent eleven of them trying not to imagine Teddy crying. The twelfth was worse. The house was quiet when you arrived.
Wrongly quiet.
Not the peaceful kind.
The kind that follows shouting.
Remus opened the door before you could knock. He looked exhausted.
"Where is he?"
"Upstairs."
You were already moving.
"Hey—" You paused halfway up the stairs. Remus rubbed a hand over his face.
"He won't talk to me." The admission sounded almost defeated. You softened immediately. "I'll try."
He nodded. The door to Teddy's room was closed. A small dinosaur sticker stared at you from eye level. You knocked once. Nothing. Twice. Still nothing.
"Teddy?"
Silence.
Then: "Go away."
You exhaled slowly. "No."
"Please." The word was so small and pleading it nearly broke your heart.
You rested your forehead against the door. "Teddy."
Nothing.
Then, after a moment: "...is it you?". Your throat tightened.
"Yeah, bubba s'me, open the door for me."
The lock clicked immediately. The door opened just enough for you to see one watery hazel eye. Then he launched himself at you.
Hard and nearly knocking the air from your lungs.
You caught him automatically. His face buried itself against your shoulder. And just like that, you knew.
Not because of what he said. Because of how tightly he was holding on. You had known fear like this before: the quiet kind.
The kind that settled in your chest after someone raised their voice. The kind that made you study every expression, every footstep, every slammed door. Trying to determine whether you were safe yet. You recognized it the moment Teddy looked up at you. "Hey."
His eyes were red, his chubby cheeks blotchy. A child trying very hard not to cry anymore. "Hey."
You sat down on the floor beside his bed and he immediately curled into your side. Neither of you spoke.
Sometimes there wasn't much to say.
A few minutes passed before he finally whispered "I was bad."
Your heart sank. "No bubba-" His fingers tightened in your sweatshirt.
"I was."
"Teddy."
"Mom said so."
The room seemed to tilt slightly. Not enough to knock you over. Enough. You chose your next words carefully. "What happened?" Teddy stared at the carpet. For a long time, you thought he wouldn't answer.
Then: "I spilled juice."
You blinked. "That's it?"
He shrugged. Small. Miserable. Ashamed.
"There was already juice on the floor."
"Okay."
"And then I dropped the cup."
You waited.
"And then she yelled." The words came out in a rush, as though saying them quickly would make them hurt less. You felt something twist painfully inside your chest.
Not anger.
Not yet.
Recognition. Children remembered yelling differently. Adults forgot that. Adults remembered the reason. Children remembered the sinking feeling.
"I think..." Teddy swallowed. "I think she hates me."
"Oh, sweetheart, no..." The words escaped immediately, before you could stop them. His eyes filled again. And there it was.
The thing he'd been carrying around all afternoon.
Not anger. Not even sadness. Fear. The awful certainty only children could have. The belief that one mistake could make someone stop loving them. You knew that feeling far too well. You gently brushed a hand through his hair.
"Listen to me." Teddy looked up. "If somebody gets frustrated, that doesn't mean they hate you."
He said nothing. "So what if she yelled?"
You smiled softly. "Then she shouldn't have yelled."
His eyes widened as though he hadn't considered that possibility. As though adults existed in a category where they were automatically right.
"No one gets to yell at you just because they're upset." The words surprised even you. They sounded older than you remembered being. Older than you felt. You swallowed. Then nudged his shoulder gently.
"But." Teddy sniffled. "But sometimes adults mess up just like kids do."
The room fell quiet. Downstairs, a floorboard creaked, someone moving around the kitchen. Probably Remus. Probably Tonks. Probably both.
Teddy leaned into your side. "You really came." The words were barely above a whisper. You closed your eyes briefly. Then pressed a kiss against the top of his head. "Always."
And somewhere downstairs, a chair scraped across the floor. As though someone had just sat down very suddenly.
You saw less and less of the Lupins after that.
At first, you told yourself it was temporary, an adjustment period.
Tonks and Teddy needed time.
Remus and Tonks needed time.
You were being mature about it. Reasonable.
Normal.
Then one week became two, two became three, and suddenly the absence had settled into something real. The strange thing was that nobody had asked you to leave. Not once.
Teddy still asked about you.
Tonks still invited you over.
Remus still texted occasionally: A photograph of a disastrous science project, a reminder to send him the name of a book you'd recommended, a complaint about faculty meetings. Small things. Ordinary things.
Which somehow made them worse, because every message reminded you that life was continuing without you. One evening, your phone buzzed while you were making dinner for one.
remus:): Do you remember how you got Teddy to eat broccoli?
You stared at the message.
Then laughed despite yourself, replying 'Blackmail'.
His reply arrived immediately.
remus:): I knew it.
You smiled, then stared at the screen long after the conversation ended because three months ago, you wouldn't have received that question through a phone. You would've been standing in his kitchen. Stealing vegetables from Teddy's plate. Listening to Remus complain about grading.
The distance hurt in ways you hadn't expected, not because you missed the house.
Because you missed him. Teddy or Remus you didn't know.
And apparently, he missed you too. Teddy or Remus you didn't know.
Then you realized it gradually, in the way his messages lingered or in the way he found increasingly ridiculous reasons to contact you... in the way conversations that should've lasted three minutes somehow stretched into forty.
One night he called. You answered without thinking.
"Hey."
"Hey."
Silence. Comfortable. Dangerous. You sat down on your couch.
"What happened?"
"What do you mean?"
"You only call when something happened."
A low, familiar laugh.
God. You missed that laugh.
"That's offensive."
"It's true."
Another laugh, then silence again. You waited.
Eventually: "I just wanted to hear your voice."
The room stopped. Not completely. Just enough. Long enough for your heart to stumble over itself. On the other end of the line, Remus went quiet too. As though he'd only realized what he'd said after saying it. Neither of you acknowledged it. Neither of you were brave enough. So instead he asked about your classes. And you let him. Because some things were easier to survive when they remained unnamed.
Later that night, long after the call ended, Remus sat alone in the kitchen. The house was asleep. Tonks upstairs. Teddy dreaming. A mug of tea cooling between his hands. For the first time in months, he allowed himself to admit it.
The house felt full again.
It should have been enough.
For a while, he thought it might be but every time something funny happened, he still reached for his phone. Every time Teddy did something ridiculous, he wanted to tell you. Every time he saw an article about your major's studies, he thought of you. And every time he opened the front door after work, a small part of him still expected to find you sitting on the kitchen island.
Waiting. The realization terrified him. Because Tonks had come home. And somehow, impossibly, he still missed you.
At first, Remus thought time would fix it because time fixed most things. Grief dulled. Anger softened. Old wounds scarred over. That was what people said, anyway. So he tried.
God, he tried.
He took Tonks to dinner and sat beside her during movie nights and listened when she talked about the years she'd spent away. About the jobs she'd worked, about the places she'd lived, about the mistakes she'd made.
He listened because she deserved that much. Because Teddy deserved that much. Because families weren't things you abandoned the moment they became difficult. Some evenings, he would look across the dinner table and see exactly what he had wanted for years.
Tonks laughing.
Teddy talking with his mouth full.
Three plates instead of two.
A family.
A complete one.
It should have made him happy.
Instead, there was always something missing. A fourth laugh. A familiar voice from the kitchen. Someone stealing fries from Teddy's plate. Someone sitting cross-legged on the counter while he cooked. The absence followed him everywhere.
One night, Tonks reached across the couch and took his hand. Remus nearly jumped not because he didn't expect affection but because he hadn't realized how long it had been since he'd wanted it. Tonks noticed immediately. Of course she did. She'd always been good at reading people.The smile she gave him afterward broke his heart. Not because it was sad. Because it was understanding.
Weeks passed. Then months. And somehow things became worse. Not better. He found himself dreading evenings. Dreading the moments when the house finally became quiet. Because that was when pretending became hardest.
Tonks would sit beside him... close enough for him to smell her shampoo, close enough that, years ago, he would have reached for her without thinking. Now he found himself staring at the television. Or his tea. Or literally anything else.
Anything but her.
One evening, she leaned over and kissed his cheek. A simple thing. Affectionate. Normal. Remus froze. The reaction lasted less than a second. Long enough. Tonks pulled away first.
The silence afterward felt endless.
"I'm sorry."
The words escaped before he could stop them. Tonks stared at him. Then laughed softly not because it was funny, because the alternative was crying.
"You don't have to apologize." The lie hung between them. Neither of them challenged it.
That night, long after she'd fallen asleep, Remus lay awake staring at the ceiling. The room was dark. The house silent. Beside him, Tonks shifted in her sleep. For a moment, he remembered being twenty-five.
Remembered loving her.
Remembered believing that was enough.
Then his mind drifted somewhere else. To a girl sitting on a kitchen island. To laughter. To dinosaur bandages. To someone who always stole his good pens. Remus closed his eyes. The guilt was immediate.
Crushing.
Because Tonks wasn't doing anything wrong. She was trying. Trying harder than she ever had before. And somehow he still found himself reaching for memories that weren't hers.
Two months later, he woke to an empty bed. At first, he didn't think anything of it. Tonks got up early sometimes. So did Teddy. The house remained silent. Strangely silent.
Remus frowned.
Sat up.
The other side of the mattress was cold. Not recently vacated. Cold. A knot formed immediately in his stomach. He stood. Pulled on a sweater. Walked downstairs. Nobody in the kitchen. Nobody in the living room. Then he saw it.
A folded piece of paper sitting beside the coffee machine.
His name.
Written in familiar handwriting. For one terrible moment, he already knew. His hands shook as he unfolded it.
Remus,
I'm sorry.
The words blurred almost instantly. Not because he was crying. Not yet. Because he couldn't stop staring at them.
I'm sorry.
Again.
Always sorry.
Never staying.
He read the rest anyway: About not belonging here anymore. About how hard she'd tried. About how Teddy deserved better than a mother who had to force herself to stay. About how he deserved better too.
By the time he reached the end, his hands were trembling. The kitchen felt very far away. Very quiet. Footsteps thundered down the stairs.
"Teddy?" he called automatically. No answer.
Then: "Dad?"
The note slipped from his fingers.
Teddy appeared in the doorway wearing dinosaur pajamas. Still half asleep. Still smiling.
"Mom said we'd make pancakes today."
Remus forgot how to breathe. The smile disappeared immediately. Children always knew. Some instinct science was yet to figure out. Some horrible little instinct.
"Dad?" Remus swallowed. Hard. "Teddy."
The boy's face changed. Confusion. Then fear. Then understanding.
"No." The word came instantly. Before Remus had said anything. "No."
"Teddy—"
"No."
His voice cracked.
Small.
Desperate.
"No."
Remus crossed the room in two strides and caught him before he could run. Before he could fall apart. Before they both did. Teddy fought him for exactly three seconds with all his might. Then collapsed. The sob that left him sounded too big for a seven year old.
Remus held him tighter.
His own vision blurring. His own chest splitting open. Not because he'd lost Tonks, that grief felt known. Ancient. A wound reopened too many times to surprise him anymore. No.
The unbearable part was watching Teddy lose her again. And knowing he had no idea how to make it hurt less.
James takes Teddy for the afternoon. It isn't a difficult decision.
Harry adores Teddy.
Teddy adores Harry.
And James takes one look at Remus' face before saying, gently "I've got him."
Remus doesn't argue, doesn't have the energy. The house is silent after they leave and silence had never bothered him before but now it feels unbearable; Every room is full of ghosts. Tonks' coffee mug. Tonks' handwriting on the fridge. The blanket she'd used on the couch.
The things left after she left. Again.
By three in the afternoon, Remus is sitting on the kitchen floor not because he fell but because he couldn't make himself stand anymore. The note lies crumpled beside him. His tea has gone cold. The house won't stop being empty. And for the first time all day, he lets himself cry.
Not quietly.
Not dignified.
The ugly kind. The exhausted kind. The kind that comes after years.
Years of trying.
Of hoping.
Of being angry.
Then forgiving.
Then hoping again.
His phone buzzes in his pocket.
James. He ignores it. It buzzes again.
And again.
Finally, he answers.
"She's gone." The words come out broken. James goes quiet immediately. "Remus—"
"She's gone."
A laugh escapes him, a horrible one.
"Again."
Silence.
"Do you want me to come over?"
"No."
"Okay."
Another pause. "Who do you want?" The question catches him off guard because the answer arrives instantly, without thinking.
Without hesitation. Without permission.
You.
The realization hits like a punch, James hears the silence and understands immediately. Of course he does. Remus presses the heel of his hand against his eyes. Humiliating. Pathetic. True.
"Oh, mate." And somehow that's worse. James sounds sad, not surprised. Like he'd been waiting for Remus to figure it out.
The call ends ten minutes later. Remus doesn't remember how. The house remains silent, he stares at his phone, at your name for a long time. Then presses call. You answer on the second ring.
"Hello?"
And that nearly does him in. Just your voice. Familiar. Warm. Normal.
"Remus?"
Nothing. His throat closes completely.
"Remus?"
More urgent now, concerned. He then tries to speak. Fails. A horrible sound leaves him instead.
Not quite a sob.
Close enough.
The silence on your end lasts half a second.
"I'm coming over."
No questions. No hesitation. No explanation. Just certainty. The line goes dead and twenty-seven minutes later, you're standing on his front porch.
Remus opens the door before you can knock, one look at him and your heart breaks.
He looks awful.
Eyes red.
Face pale.
Exhaustion carved into every line.
For a second neither of you move.
Then you step forward and Remus folds. Not dramatically. Not romantically.
Just... Falls apart.
Like something inside him finally gave way. You wrap your arms around him automatically the same way you've done with Teddy, the same way you've done with frightened children and grieving friends and exhausted classmates.
And Remus lets you, for the first time, really lets you.
His forehead presses against your shoulder, his hands clutch the back of your sweater and suddenly he's crying again.
You don't say anything. You just hold him. The way he's held everyone else for years.
Eventually the storm passes. Not completely. Enough.
You end up sitting on the kitchen floor side by side.
The evening sun creeping through the windows, neither of you looking at each other.
"I tried." His voice is rough. Raw. "I really tried."
"I know." A laugh. Broken around the edges.
"God." He scrubs a hand over his face. "I wanted it to work."
You stare at the floor.
Unable to think of anything that doesn't hurt.
Then: "I know."
Silence settles between you, the way it always has been, comfortable.
The way it probably always will be.
And suddenly Remus is so tired of pretending. So tired of carrying it. So tired of saying everything except the truth.
"I missed you."
The words slip out quietly, honestly.
Your breath catches. Neither of you move. The kitchen feels very small suddenly. Very still. Remus laughs weakly.
"I know."
Another silence.
Then: "I know I shouldn't have."
Your eyes close. Because that's the problem. Because you've missed him too. Every day. Every fucking day.
"I know." His head finally turns, meeting your gaze.
Years of affection sitting quietly between you.
Years of almosts.
Years of choosing not to look too closely.
And suddenly neither of you have the energy for denial anymore.
Not after today.
Not after everything.
"I love you."
Exhausted.
Certain.
Like admitting the sky is blue. Like admitting something everyone already knows. For a moment, you simply stare at him.
Then your eyes fill. Because of course.
Of course.
The stupid, wonderful, impossible man.
"I know."
A laugh escapes him, wet and broken. "That wasn't the response I was hoping for."
You laugh too. The first real laugh all day. Then reach for his hand. Squeeze. And finally say the thing that's been true for a very long time.
"I love you too."
Years later, Teddy would remember two things about the day his mother left.
The first was the note.
The second was that you came the way you always had.
You came with groceries because Remus had forgotten to eat, you came with ice cream because Teddy had stopped talking.
You came because nobody asked you not to.
And because, despite everything, this was still the first place you thought of when someone said home. The months that followed were difficult. Teddy was angry. Then sad. Then angry again.
Remus spent a long time pretending he wasn't heartbroken, not because he'd lost Tonks, that grief had happened years ago. No. What broke him was watching Teddy wait. Watching him glance toward the door whenever the bell rang. Watching him check his phone on birthdays. Watching hope slowly become disappointment.
There were no grand speeches, no magical solutions. Just ordinary days. Homework at the kitchen table. Movie nights. School assemblies. Burnt pancakes. Life.
Life, stubborn and relentless, carrying all three of you forward whether you were ready or not.
One day, almost a year later, Teddy stopped waiting by the window. Neither of you mentioned it. The absence hurt enough, the next year, he forgot to ask if she would call on his birthday. That hurt too.
But less.
Healing often did.
The first time Remus told you he loved you, he was crying on the kitchen floor, the second time happened six months later while you were arguing over whether dinosaurs would survive modern society, the third happened while folding laundry, the fourth happened half asleep.
By the fifth, neither of you were counting anymore.
Love, it turned out, was rarely grand.
Mostly it was repetitive.
Choosing the same person over and over again. On purpose. Years later, you found an old photograph while cleaning.
Remus and Teddy and you. A cardboard castle. The roof half collapsed. Tape everywhere.
You smiled immediately.
Teddy, now significantly taller than either of you liked to admit, glanced over your shoulder. "God."
You laughed. "What?"
"I was so weird." He sighs.
"You built a dragon fortress out of Amazon boxes."
"I know." He cringes.
"You made me wear a cardboard princess hat."
"I know." He groans.
"You bit me."
Teddy looked thoughtful. Then nodded. "Yeah." The lack of remorse after all these years was astonishing. You showed him the photograph anyway. Teddy stared at it for a long moment.
At himself.
At his father.
At you.
The smile that crossed his face was soft. Almost nostalgic.
"You know..."
"What?"
He pointed at the picture, at the three people squeezed together inside that ridiculous cardboard castle. And said, with complete certainty:
"This was always my family."
The room went quiet. Across the kitchen, Remus looked up from his book. You felt your throat tighten. Teddy didn't seem to notice. Or maybe he did. Maybe that was why he'd said it.
He grinned suddenly. Then ruined the moment completely.
"Also, I still think biting you was a good idea."
You threw a dish towel at his head.
Remus laughed. Teddy laughed harder.
And surrounded by the noise of the life you had built together, you found yourself laughing too.
The first time Teddy Lupin bit you, he left a mark on your hand.
Years later, neither of you had any idea he'd leave one on your life.
author's note: holy fucking shit this is so long im so so sorry i had a dream and had to write it out!!!! hope u enjoyed my lovelies! thanks for reading. ASKS ARE OPEN!!! I write for pretty much any fandom so feel free to ask over there <3
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proof that every single person has been lying about the void and shifting.
the millions of people that have come on here and other social media platforms were all lying about their experinces, no one has gotten into the void, no one shifted, no one can manifest. it was all a fucking lie come up with people with schizophernia. your right.
not only are the people from todays day and age lying about their experinces, but so where the
Vedic sages, yogis, rishis in
india
who wrote:
the Vedas (4 total)
the Upanishads (~108 traditionally, ~10–13 major)
the Bhagavad Gita
the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali
the Puranas (18 major)
the Tantric texts (100+)
the Advaita Vedanta texts
the medieval yogi writings
they were all lying too, right? the same sages who spent:years,decades and entire lifetimes in isolation, meditation, and deep observation of their own consciousness just made it all up
the Upanishads describing: a state beyond waking,beyond dreaming
beyond deep sleep a fourth state where there is no thoughts no duality no inside or outside, only awareness. that’s not what the void is, right?
the Mandukya Upanishad literally saying: there exists a state “not inwardly conscious, not outwardly conscious, not both… unseen, beyond thought, indescribable”
the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali describing: what happens when “the fluctuations of the mind cease” and what remains is: pure awareness without disturbance but yeah that’s totally not what people are trying to reach/how they describe being in the void.
the Bhagavad Gita teaching: detachment from identity, detachment from the outcomes, telling us to act without the ego becoming still, unaffected almost like you are not the “self” you think you are.
the entire philosophy of Advaita Vedanta saying: you are not your body
you are not your mind your true nature is pure consciousness formless unchanging and silent and that the world you experience is not as solid as it seems.
the Tantric traditions going even further,not just describing the state but teaching how to enter it consciously through: breath focus and what happens is awareness reaching a state where everything disappears but only awareness remains. but yeah, they just imagined that too. thousands of years ago. before the internet
before shared global communication before modern psychology they all faked the exact same experince.
and the monks in
Thailand, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos
who wrote the Pali Canon thousands of pages of teachings, observations, and direct descriptions of the mind teaching there is no permanent “self” no fixed identity no unchanging “I” everything you think is “you” is changing, arising and disappearing moment to moment. but yeah they’ve obviously never actually seen reality as it is, right?
the Heart Sutra saying: “form is emptiness, emptiness is form” meaning: what you experience as solid reality has no fixed essence. things appear but are empty at their core.that has nothing to do with reality not being as real or solid as it feels.
the Diamond Sutra saying: let go of identity,ego,concepts and attachments and the moment you stop clinging to the false 3d you experience reality directly. not filtered, not constructed,not distorted by your ego just your true awareness. unrelated right?
the Lankavatara Sutra teaching: reality is shaped by mind and what you perceive what you experiencen is not independent it arises from consciousness itself. and these monks who spent: years decades entire lifetimes in meditation observing every thought every sensation every layer of awareness just made all of this up?
they didn’t actually experience the sweet sweet serenity of just being your pure awarness and the calmness that comes with being one with the divine(you) they just wrote thousands of pages for fun, right?obviously they were not documenting what they directly experienced.
and the monks in
china
who wrote the Platform Sutra teaching that the mind is originally pure not something you have to build not something you have to create but something that is already: empty clear aware and that everything thoughts identity and reality itself arises from this emptiness. but.. are you sure this has nothing to do with the void right?
“Originally there is nothing.” nothing to hold on to nothing to identify with nothing that is truly fixed the Gateless Gate asking questions like: “What is your original face before you were born?” questions that make no logical sense on purpose. because the goal is not to understand but to break thinking completely to push the mind(only your ego)into collapse until there are no thoughts left only awarenes. that’s definitely not what people describe when they say they reach the void.
and Zen itself teaching: that direct experience > theory not reading not thinking not analyzing not researching but seeing for yourself. experiencing. and yet people today spend more time : reading posts scrolling consuming content about the void instead of actually experiencing or even trying to get into the void or shifting . that’s not the problem at all. obviously.
and the Tao Te Ching teaching the universe comes from nothing. “Tao” litterally meaning formless,empty,ungraspable “Empty yourself of everything.Let the mind become still.” not add more not do more but remove thoughts, effort and identity until what remains is stillness,emptiness and awareness but yeah. that has nothing to do with what people experince in the void.
and the Zhuangzi teaching: reality is fluid identity is not fixed and that the “self” you think you are is not stable not permanent not real in the way you think it is, reality might be real but it is not true. telling you to forget yourself drop the ego drop the identity merge with everything(becoming one with the universe) until there is no separation no “you” vs “everything else” just awareness. and when you sit in this feeling and truly forget yourself,your thoughts,your identity what remains? but yeah. that’s definitely not the process people describe when entering the void, right?
and Taoism as a whole literally saying your natural state is emptiness thinking is disturbance and what you’re trying to reach is not something new but something you already are. but yeah. that’s not what people have been saying at all.
and of course it not like the monks in
tibet
who literally teach there is a state of pure empty awareness a state you can enter consciously but only if you do not fear it do not react to it because the moment you do you lose it. but yeah. that has nothing to do with what often happens to first time shifters who shift for the first time or get into the void for the first time right?
the tibetian book of dead literally says: right after death you enter a state called Clear Light where there is no body no thoughts
no physical 3d world just: awareness, pure that’s definitely not what people call the void. it’s not like it’s described as “empty yet aware… luminous… infinite” and it’s not like they explain what happens next,that if you recognize this state stay calm and do not react you reach liberation. but if you panic you fall back, back into form,identity,illusion the 3d (which totally doesn’t sound like what happens when people get close and suddenly snap out of it, right?) but yeah. they were allll just imagining it. it’s not like this is literally awareness + nothingness the exact thing people today call the void state.
and its not like ancient civlizations in
egypt
who believed that before anything existed there was only: darkness infinite stillness and formlessness not space, not time, not matter infinite darkness
this state called Nun not a place not an object but the primordial void the source from which: everything emerges it being litterally described as: no sky no earth no time no gods just endless dark emptiness. that’s definitely not similar to anything people describe today. totally different from what people call the void.
and the Pyramid Texts teaching what happens after death describing the soul returning not to a physical place but to a formless state before creation back to the origin the beginning the void.
and the Coffin Texts describing: the journey through the afterlife not as something physical but as movement through darkness and formlessness returning to what existed before everything. and the entire concept they were teaching that, everything comes from emptiness that the universe began from Nun that emptiness is not nothing but the source of everything that creation itself came from the void. but yeah. completely meaningless. and that after death you don’t just disappear you return to darkness to formlessness to the original state
and it’s not like civilizations across the world who had no contact with each other no shared language, no shared systems described the same idea, that before everything there was: emptiness and beyond everything there is emptiness. all fake right?
and yeah also the sufis and mystics in
the middle east
who talk about Fana the annihilation of self, teaching that your ego disappears and your “I” disappears at your highest form of being. which means right now you think: “I am me”
“I have an identity” but that “I” is temporary and falsely constructed the goal is to let that “I” dissolve. they describe it as losing yourself disappearing becoming nothing just existence. totally not what giving up your ego sounds like right?
it’s not like they say you don’t just become empty you become filled with: love unity and serenity
so their “void” is, empty of ego, but full of connection. and it’s not like they explain the process of reaching this state too, right?
through love and devotion focus on God (the good in life, the power of the supreme, the power within you) ego starts dissolving the “I” becomes weaker Fana (annihilation) no self remains and after that comes Baqa(remaining) you exist again but without ego dissolving into something bigger there is no boundary between: “you”
and everything.
and it’s not like it is literally scientifically and mathematically true that in higher spatial dimensions (four and more), our 3D understanding of “inside” and “outside” fails. that concepts of boundary and containment vanish that objects can become unknotted that a 3D sphere can be removed from a closed 3D box without passing through its walls.
its not like saints, chritsian mystics and contemplatives and the bible in
europe
who wrote The Cloud of Unknowing teaching that you cannot understand truth and you cannot understand God through thinking
and through logic that to reach the truth you must enter a state of not knowing no thoughts no understanding no identity letting go of everything you think you know until what remains is mental emptiness and silent awareness
but yeah. that has nothing to do with what people call the void, right?
and Jesus in the Bible saying:
“the kingdom of God is within you”
“You will realize that I am in my Father,
and you are in me,
and I am in you.”
“Whoever wants to follow me must deny themselves”
pointing to look inward, let go of ego and let go of identity
are you sure after reading all this as sure as you are with your doubts
its all just some crazy coincidence that all of this, people from across the GLOBE that had no way of communication had ideas that
point to the same thing?
note: yo this post took me so much time and energy to make😭 i had to do sm research and gather info from so many diff sources and yt videos (esp from yt videos) and plus this is just 40% of what i found this post cant get tooooo long lmaoo🤭i made this in hopes that you understand and that it STICKS that there is more proof of the void being real then there is that it isnt. also this was supposed to be an ans to this ask origially but it got way too long lmao
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I am going to acknowledge the Ides of March by saying that it is questionably joyful and whimsical. While killing, murdering, and stabbing are generally not considered joyful and whimsical activities, when it is aimed at a corrupt emperor and also celebrated in a silly fashion, it does start to become a little more joy and whimsy flavored.
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