Simple answer, not really, but yes at the same time. And I guess this begs another question what do you consider religion? In my opinion religion does not equal spiritual paractice. Religion to me equals a set way of doing thingd, where as Spituality is not.
Many people often confuse religion with spirituality, which leads to a lot of misunderstandings. Religion is a set of organized beliefs, doctrines, and practices that are followed by people as a way of expressing their faith and achieving a connection with a higher power. On the other hand, spirituality is a personal journey that involves exploring and finding meaning, purpose, and connection in life.
Religion can be seen as a structured system, with specific rules, rituals, and practices that must be followed. It often has a central text, a hierarchy, and a certain set of beliefs that followers must adhere to. There are specific ways to pray, worship, and conduct oneself in religious activities.
Spirituality, on the other hand, is not bound by any rules or doctrines. It is a personal journey that involves exploring one’s own beliefs, values, and experiences. Spiritual practice can take many forms, from meditation and yoga to prayer and nature walks.
It’s also important to note that spirituality is not necessarily associated with any particular religious belief. People can be spiritual without following any particular religion or dogma. In essence, spirituality is a way of being that is personal and unique to each individual.
Therefore, religion and spirituality are not the same. While religion can provide structure and guidance for those seeking a connection with the divine, spirituality allows individuals to explore their own unique understanding of the world and their place in it.
Lugh Sulian
Standing on the Ledge · Rebuilding from the Rubble
Lugh Sulian is a working name for a working moment.
This profile exists to hold Standing on the Ledge: Rebuilding from the Rubble—an ongoing, real-time record of what happens after collapse, when old rules stop functioning and new ones haven’t yet earned trust.
This is not myth reenactment.
Not spiritual bypass.
Not curated healing.
It’s a field journal from the threshold.
The name Lugh points toward skill, clarity, and responsibility carried with awareness. Sulian gestures toward sight—what can be seen when illusion drops away and pretending becomes too expensive. Together, they frame the posture of this work: to look clearly, act deliberately, and refuse to rebuild what already failed.
Through short-form video, spoken reflection, and long-form writing, this project explores:
Collapse without spectacle
Responsibility without authority
Burnout as a systems problem, not a personal flaw
Pagan cycles as lived practice, not aesthetic
Small fires instead of grand rebuilds
This space is intentionally unfinished. It documents:
Standing still without freezing
Moving forward without rushing
Learning from rubble instead of hiding it
Unplugged-Pagan.com serves as the grounding—seasonal awareness, ritual stripped of performance, and meaning built from experience rather than doctrine. Standing on the Ledge is one expression of that grounding, focused on the human cost of broken systems and the slow work of rebuilding integrity.
This is not a teaching platform.
It’s a shared watchpost.
If you’re here, you’re likely between versions of yourself—tired, alert, uncertain, and still standing. You don’t need answers yet. You need honesty, boundaries, and permission to move at the speed of truth.
No conclusions offered.
No certainty promised.
Still on the ledge.
Still watching.
Still working the rubble.
Godspeed.
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Short bio (Facebook / site header):
Threshold work. Pagan-rooted, process-driven. Documenting collapse, clarity, and the refusal to rebuild what failed.
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