Abiscoridism vs. Abiscordism

What’s the Difference?

The short answer? Nothing and everything.

Abiscoridism and Abiscordism are two sides of the same coin. One gives structure, the other gives life. Together, they form the foundation of The Cult of Brighter Days. Here’s how they work:

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Why Do We Have Both?

Because real life is a mix of order and chaos. If you only have Abiscoridism, you might
stuck thinking about life instead of living it. If you only have Abiscordism, you might
wander aimlessly without any foundation to build on. The key is balancing both:

  • 📑 Use Abiscoridism to understand ideas and set goals.
  • 🎭 Use Abiscordism to actually experience life and adjust when needed.

Abiscoridism: The Blueprint

Abiscoridism is a structured philosophy. It’s the framework, the rules, and the guiding ideas.
It gives us something to hold onto when things feel chaotic. Think of it like:

  • 🗺 A map that shows you different paths you could take.
  • 📖 The recipe before you start cooking.
  • 🎓 The theory behind how something works.

It’s about thinking, learning, and setting a foundation for understanding the world.
But here’s the thing—life doesn’t always follow a blueprint.

Abiscordism: The Experience

Abiscordism is how we live the philosophy. It’s messy, unpredictable, and always evolving.

If Abiscoridism is the map, then Abiscordism is the journey—full of wrong turns, unexpected shortcuts, and spontaneous detours.
Sometimes, you end up somewhere better than you planned.

  • 🧑‍🍳 Improvising while cooking because you ran out of ingredients.
  • 📚 Learning something in class, only to realize real life doesn’t always follow the textbook.
  • 🚗 Planning a road trip versus going on one—complete with detours, pit stops, and unplanned adventures.

Abiscordism is about experimenting, adapting, and making philosophy work in the real world. It’s not about following rules perfectly—figuring things out as you go and embracing the chaos.

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Real World Examples

  • 🔬 Science & Engineering: Scientists create theories (Abiscoridism), but engineers adjust them to build real things (Abiscordism).
  • 🎨 Art: Learning art techniques is Abiscoridism. Breaking the rules to create something unique is Abiscordism.
  • 📅 Life Plans: Making a schedule is Abiscoridism. Realizing you have to adapt when things change is Abiscordism.

(Yeah, we know—we probably could’ve just called it something simple, like how “jazz” lets you know it’s music but with more chaos. But no, our leader had to make it unnecessarily complicated. It’s kind of his thing.)

So, Which One Are You?

You’re both! You learn the structure and then live the chaos.
That’s what makes The Cult of Brighter Days what it is—
a mix of thinking and doing, planning and adapting, knowing and exploring.

Because honestly? The most Abiscoridist thing we could do is keep both.

And the most Abiscordist thing we could do is let you decide what that means for yourself.

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