You believe you are free.You believe you choose your thoughts, your words, your actions.You believe you are the master of your life.It is a lie.Your days are wound upon a wheel that turns without you. You are pulled by appetites you did not create, chained by fears you do not see, and spoken through by voices that are not your own. You are a puppet whose strings are woven not only by society, but by forces older than Earth itself.This is the true horror: your slavery is lawful. The universe is built as a hierarchy of laws. At the summit, in the Absolute, there is only one law-freedom itself. At the nadir, under the Moon, ninety-six laws bind every movement, every breath, every fragment of thought. The lower one descends, the less freedom remains. Earth is not exempt. Humanity lives under forty-eight laws: too many for liberty, but just few enough for escape.You do not see these laws. That is their mastery. They wear the masks of habit, of mood, of desire, of reason. They guide you while whispering that you are guiding yourself. You sleep. You dream. You imagine. And in that sleep, your life is harvested-not for your awakening, but for the hunger of the Moon.This book is written to wound that sleep. To tear at its fabric until you feel the bars of your cage. To name each law, so you can no longer hide behind ignorance. To show you that your slavery is precise, numbered, complete.But also, to show you the narrow gate. For if you will see, if you will remember, if you will suffer consciously and act deliberately, then you may rise. You may refuse to feed the Moon. You may gather your scattered fragments into a single "I." You may return to the freedom of the One Law.Reader, this is not a comfortable book. It is a dangerous one. Dangerous because it demands you face the terror of your condition without flinching. Dangerous because it offers no guarantees. But if you are prepared, it is also a book of hope-the hope that the Absolute Cage can be broken, and that a human being, in this brief life on Earth, can become free. How to Read This Book: The Demands of the 96 Laws A Crucial Prerequisite: What the Book DemandsTo truly benefit from these pages, you must meet certain inner conditions: Intellectual Honesty: You must admit the "lie" of your imagined freedom. Almost all your actions, emotions, and opinions are mechanical - products of conditioning and habit. Gurdjieff called this state "Waking Sleep."Sacrifice of the False I: The book requires intentional suffering and conscious labor. This means doing what is difficult, unpleasant, and against your automatic habits: refraining from anger, resisting vanity, observing negative emotion without expression. Such work destroys the False I, the illusory self you normally take as "me."Practice Over Philosophy: This is not abstract metaphysics. Every law must be studied through self-observation (seeing it act in you) and self-remembering (being present in that seeing). Without practice, the book remains words. Closing Note for the ReaderIf you agree to these terms, the book can help you. It can wound your sleep and show you the bars of your cage. It can point the way toward cracks in that cage, where freedom may enter.But be warned: if you read it only as theory, it will remain useless - or worse, it will feed your imagination, making you think you are working when you are not.The choice is yours: to read mechanically, or to work consciously. This book is part of the "Timeless Wisdom Series", offering insights into spirituality, philosophy, psychology, and self-growth for readers of all ages.