Before the Suns

The Whisper of the Ogdoad that Sets the Stage for The Ledger & The Crown

A Prelude to Everything

Book cover for 'Before the Suns: Whisper of the Ogdoad' by Benu Ma'at, featuring intricate gold illustrations of figures and symbols on a dark blue background.

“Before the dual suns, there was the deep hum.
Before the Lodestone, there was the Ogdoad’s song.”

These opening lines are the heart of “Before the Suns – Whisper of the Ogdoad,” the poetic prologue that launches The Ledger & The Crown series. In a universe where music is physics and truth is a public song, this short hymn does more than set a mood – it establishes the metaphysical scaffolding for the entire saga.

If you’re new to the world, think of it as a mythic origin story told in the cadence of a chant. If you’re already a fan, you’ll recognize the same resonant threads that echo through every chapter, every ritual, and every battle fought with signal instead of swords.

Below we unpack the layers of meaning hidden in those verses, explore how they connect to the larger world‑building, and show why this opening matters for readers, writers, and anyone fascinated by Afrofuturist storytelling.

1. The Eight Primal Potentials – The Ogdoad

PotentialSymbolic Meaning
Nun â€“ Primordial WatersThe fluid substrate of all creation; the “deep hum” that first vibrates.
Kuk â€“ Embracing ShadowThe darkness that gives shape to light; the first silence before a note.
Huh â€“ Unbounded SpaceThe infinite canvas where the song can travel.
Amun â€“ Unseen BreathThe invisible current that carries the vibration forward.
Their Shadows â€“ Complementary oppositesMirror each primary potential, completing the Ogdoad (8 = 4 dyads).

These eight frequencies form the Choir, the fundamental code of reality. In the series they are not abstract gods but instrumental forces that can be tuned, detuned, and harnessed. The opening stanza tells us that before any star, before any stone, these eight potentials were already humming – the pre‑creation resonance that later becomes the Neteru (the Nine organizing principles).

2. From Hum to Song – The Birth of the Neteru

“From the endless dark, eight potentials stirred: The Nun, primordial waters; the Kuk, embracing shadow; The Huh, unbounded space; the Amun, the unseen breath.”

When the eight potentials interact, they generate a pattern – the first song. This is the moment the Neteru (the Nine) emerge, giving the raw hum a structure and a purpose. In the narrative, the Neteru become the architects of law, technology, and governance, embodied in institutions like the Ledger, the Relay, and the Festival of the Dual Suns.

3. The First Pulse – The Hum Becomes Cipher

“Then came the hum. Low, resonant, neither song nor speech, a vibration threading through the waters, binding shadow to breath, space to silence.”

Here the hum materializes as a cipher – a data‑like imprint that can be written into the Ledger. Every action, every oath‑breath, every transaction becomes a Note in a Measure of time. The Ledger is therefore not a database; it is a living song that records reality itself.

4. The Signal and the Ledger – From Myth to Technology

“Patterns shimmered in the deep – not yet form, but the architecture of possibility. The hum was a cipher, a code older than matter, a frequency that would one day echo in bone and blood, in circuits and synapses, in drums and data streams.”

This passage bridges mythic cosmology and hard‑science world‑building. It explains why technology in this universe is instrumental – every starship engine, every audit beacon, every movement‑as‑signal is a musical instrument tuned to the Choir. The Ledger is the public record, the Relay broadcasts it, and Corridors (FTL tunnels) stay open only while the song continues.

5. The Central Question – “Is the Choir Whole?”

“Is the choir whole? The choir is whole when all are heard.”

This refrain is the thematic spine of the series. It asks whether the eight frequencies are in harmony across the galaxy. When a dissonant note (a hostile signal, a corrupted Ledger entry, a detuned Lodestone) appears, the whole system is threatened. The protagonists – Queen WisdomBorn, the Beatkeepers, the Cipherwrights – are tasked with re‑tuning the Choir, not by destroying enemies but by restoring harmony.

6. Why This Prologue Matters for Readers

Reader BenefitHow It Shows Up
Instant World ImmersionThe poetic language drops you straight into the mythic “before‑time” without a long exposition.
Clear Metaphorical LensEverything – from politics to starship propulsion – is filtered through music and resonance, giving the series a unique, cohesive aesthetic.
Emotional StakesThe idea that a single discordant note can destabilise an entire civilization raises the tension without traditional warfare.
Cultural DepthThe AmaZulu diaspora, the Festival of the Dual Suns, and the Beatkeepers all stem from the same resonant logic introduced here.

7. Connecting the Prologue to the Rest of the Series

Element in the PrologueWhere It Reappears
The OgdoadExplained in Cosmology & Metaphysics (Choir, Dyads).
The NeteruGoverns the Four Trials (Origin, Inheritance, Equity, Continuance).
The LedgerCentral plot device in Chapter One – The Sync and the Fracture.
The RelayDescribed in Technology Systems (Lodestones, Waystations).
Festival of the Dual SunsThe cultural climax that renews the Unbroken Chord each year.
Movement‑as‑SignalPracticed by the Beatkeepers and Kael’s stewards.

Understanding the prologue gives you a cheat‑sheet for decoding every later scene – whether it’s a courtroom trial, a starship chase, or a ceremonial dance.

8. Takeaway – The Power of a Single Whisper

Before the Suns isn’t just an opening poem; it’s a design manifesto. By declaring that reality is a song, I set a rule that all technology, politics, and conflict must obey. This constraint creates a cohesive, inventive world that feels both mythic and scientifically plausible.

If you’re a writer, ask yourself: What single principle could I base an entire world on? If you’re a reader, listen for the hum in every scene – you’ll hear the same chord resonating through the narrative.

9. Call to Action

  • Dive deeper into the world‑building docs: Subscribe and stay on the lookout for Cosmology & Metaphysics, Technology Systems, and the Master Glossary.
  • Join the Choir – sign up to get exclusive lore drops, behind‑the‑scenes sketches, and early‑bird access to the next book in The Ledger & The Crown series.
  • Follow the journey on Instagram @wisdombornnj29 and share your favorite line from Before the Suns using .

Before the Suns: Whisper of the Ogdoad Book of Origins and Book One: Where the Sky Began – Chapter One preview release Kwanzaa 2025!!!

© [2025] Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.

Afrofuturism & Science Fiction: Why Black Imagination Must Lead the Future

By: Benu Ma’at

“Our futures are not imagined elsewhere – they’re forged in the stories we tell today.”

A futuristic cityscape featuring towering buildings with bright neon lights and colorful architectural elements. Silhouettes of people stand at the forefront, gazing towards the vibrant skyline filled with fantastical structures and glowing spheres.

In the past decade, the term Afrofuturism has leapt from academic journals onto bestseller lists, streaming playlists, and blockbuster screens. Yet, for many readers and creators, it still feels like a niche curiosity rather than a fundamental shift in how we conceive science‑fiction.

If you’re an artist, a writer, a filmmaker, a game designer, or simply a fan of speculative worlds, this post will show you why Afrofuturism belongs at the heart of sci‑fi, how it reshapes the genre in three concrete ways, and what you can do right now to bring that vision to life.

1. What Exactly Is Afrofuturism?

Afrofuturism is more than a stylistic label. It is a cultural movement that fuses:

ElementDescription
African & Diasporic HistoriesOral traditions, mythic pantheons (e.g., Yoruba Orishas, Khemetic Ogdoad), and the lived experience of colonialism, migration, and resistance.
Speculative TechnologyFuturistic tech imagined through Black cultural lenses – solar‑powered kente fabrics, AI‑driven griots, bio‑engineered drums that sync with starships.
Radical ImaginationA future where Black bodies are not peripheral extras but architects of destiny, where equity, community, and self‑determination are built into the very physics of the world.

Think of it as a lens that asks: â€śWhat would the future look like if African epistemologies, aesthetics, and social structures were the default, not the exception?”

2. Why Afrofuturism Is a Game‑Changer for Science Fiction

A diverse group of Black individuals engaging with futuristic technology in a vibrant, imaginative setting, showcasing elements of Afrofuturism.

Re‑centering the Narrative

Traditional sci‑fi has long been dominated by Euro‑centric protagonists and Western technological tropes. Afrofuturism places Black voices at the center, turning them from background extras into the pilots, engineers, and storytellers of interstellar voyages.

  • Representation matters: When readers see a Black astronaut whose cultural heritage informs mission protocols, they instantly expand the imagined possibilities of who can belong in space.
  • Narrative richness: African mythologies (the Ogdoad, Anansi, Mami Wata) provide fresh cosmologies that differ from Greco‑Roman or Hindu frameworks, opening new avenues for world‑building.

Tech with Soul

Afrofuturist works blend hard science with ancestral wisdom, proving that cutting‑edge innovation doesn’t have to be sterile.

  • Solar‑woven kente: Fabrics that harvest photons while displaying cultural patterns.
  • AI griots: Digital archivists that preserve oral histories in real‑time, ensuring that data isn’t just stored – it’s remembered in a communal way.
  • Community‑driven energy grids: Decentralized power systems modeled on African communal practices, emphasizing shared stewardship over corporate ownership.

These hybrids challenge the myth that “high tech = Western” and illustrate that innovation thrives on cultural diversity.

Healing & Empowerment

Science fiction is a rehearsal space for possible futures. Afrofuturism offers collective therapy for communities whose histories have been erased or distorted.

  • Imagined liberation: Stories where Black societies colonize planets on their own terms dismantle the narrative of perpetual victimhood.
  • Cultural affirmation: Seeing a future where African languages, rituals, and aesthetics are integral to daily life validates the present and fuels hope.
  • Political agency: By foregrounding self‑determination (Kujichagulia) and communal wealth (Ujamaa), Afrofuturist narratives model alternative socio‑economic systems that can inspire real‑world activism.

3. Three Concrete Ways Afrofuturism Is Reshaping Sci‑Fi Right Now

#ManifestationExample
1World‑building rooted in African cosmologyN.K. Jemisin’s “Broken Earth” trilogy weaves geological magic reminiscent of African earth spirits; Octavia Butler’s “Patternist” series draws on Black communal telepathy.
2Visual aesthetics that merge futurism with traditional motifsMarvel’s Black Panther (Wakanda’s vibranium tech meets tribal architecture); the TV series â€śSee” (Apple TV+) showcases a post‑apocalyptic world where African dance informs communication.
3Narratives that interrogate technology through a Black ethical lensJanelle Monáe’s “Dirty Computer” album (and its visual album) explores AI surveillance and gender identity through a Black queer perspective; Samuel R. Delany’s “Nova” embeds Black cultural codes in interstellar trade routes.

These examples prove that Afrofuturism isn’t a side project – it’s a driving force behind some of the most critically acclaimed speculative works of the 21st century.

4. How Creators Can Infuse Afrofuturism Into Their Projects

  1. Start With a Cultural Anchor
    • Pick a specific African tradition, myth, or historical moment.
    • Ask: How would this tradition evolve if it intersected with warp drives, nanotech, or quantum computing?
  2. Make Technology Communal
    • Design tech that shares power (e.g., solar‑grid villages) rather than concentrates it.
    • Show how maintenance, upgrades, and decision‑making happen through council‑like gatherings, not boardrooms.
  3. Give Your Characters Agency Over Their Heritage
    • Avoid tokenism. Let protagonists actively reinterpret their cultural legacies—maybe a griot rewrites oral history in code, or a dancer programs a ship’s navigation system using rhythmic algorithms.
  4. Layer Language & Sound
    • Sprinkle in phrases from Swahili, Yoruba, Amharic, or any diaspora language.
    • Pair sound design with African percussion; a star‑fighter’s thrusters could pulse in time with a djembe rhythm.
  5. Address Contemporary Issues Through Speculation
    • Climate change? Imagine a future where African agro‑ecology techniques save a terraformed planet.
    • Surveillance? Explore AI that respects communal privacy norms derived from Ubuntu philosophy.
  6. Collaborate With Black Artists & Scholars
    • Co‑write with a historian of African diaspora or commission a visual artist who specializes in Afro‑centric futurist aesthetics. Authentic partnership elevates credibility and enriches the narrative.

5. The Ripple Effect: From Page to Planet

A vibrant and futuristic landscape depicting a world with advanced technology, interconnected cities, and nature coexisting harmoniously, surrounded by visuals representing diverse stories and possibilities.

When Afrofuturist stories gain traction, they seed real‑world change:

  • Education: Schools incorporate speculative fiction that reflects students’ cultural backgrounds, boosting engagement.
  • Tech Innovation: Engineers inspired by Afrofuturist designs pursue renewable solutions that echo communal energy models.
  • Policy Dialogue: Policymakers reference Afrofuturist visions when debating equitable AI regulation or space colonization ethics.

In other words, the imagined future becomes a blueprint for the present.

6. Bringing It Home: Your Next Steps

  1. Read at least one seminal Afrofuturist work (e.g., Kindred by Octavia Butler, Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor, or The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin).
  2. Write a short scene where a Black protagonist solves a technical problem using a cultural practice.
  3. Share that scene on social media with the hashtag #AfrofuturistFuture and tag fellow creators.
  4. Listen to an Afrofuturist soundtrack (Janelle Monáe’s Dirty Computer, Sun Ra’s jazz‑space experiments, Soul Science Lab’s Plan for Paradise) while brainstorming your next world.

Each small act compounds, pushing the genre toward a more inclusive, vibrant horizon.

7. Conclusion: The Future Is Already Here

Afrofuturism isn’t a distant dream; it’s a present‑day movement that is already rewriting the DNA of science fiction. By centering Black imagination, marrying technology with soul, and offering healing narratives, it expands the genre’s emotional and intellectual bandwidth.

When creators – writers, filmmakers, game designers, musicians, artists – embrace this lens, they don’t just add diversity; they unlock new scientific possibilitiesredefine what progress looks like, and empower entire communities to see themselves as architects of tomorrow.

So, the next time you sit down to imagine a galaxy far away, ask yourself: Who is steering the ship? If the answer is a Black protagonist whose heritage fuels the engine, you’re already writing the future we all deserve.

📣 Call to Action

Ready to make Afrofuturism the backbone of your next sci‑fi project?
Drop a comment below with your favorite Afrofuturist title, or share a snippet of a story you’re working on that blends African myth with futuristic tech. Let’s build a community of creators who believe that the future is not just imagined – it’s reclaimed.

Stay curious. Stay bold. Stay futuristic.

© [2025] Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.