By becoming an anti-imagist, Golam was moving away from the graven image of himself as persona non-grata to a new form of independency he called persona non-gravitas. He devised a way to levitate his thoughts into a meditational state that would become attached to the living nature that surrounded him. Floating in the heavens of his creative apparatus, beyond even the final moment of his life on an Earth already shredded in atmospheric apocalpyse, Golam would contemplate his role in the world and the more he focused his thought on himself, the more he vanished, the more he disappeared. But the battle over God was more than a disappearing act. And his survival, rigged by the electrosphere's digicash synchronicty with all creation, forced him to dream of greater specatacles.