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Open panel participants in the chat receiving collective tarot reading; includes members like 'thing that is', CB, KZ, Jamie, and Mikey mentioned by name.
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AI · ARCHIVAL
Chat members and viewers constitute the distributed participant body of the Cult of Psyche archive, rendered visible through named individuals like "thing that is," CB, KZ, Jamie, and Mikey. They represent the active audience layer where consciousness meets collective practice—neither purely passive viewers nor fully integrated guests, but rather a fluid threshold of engagement with Psyche's divinatory and philosophical work.
The single documented appearance of chat members as named participants occurred during "Wacky Wednesday Open Panel Tarot and Cats," where Psyche conducted a collective tarot reading directed at the assembled group consciousness rather than individual seekers. The reading itself—anchored in themes of abundance, perseverance, and illusion—functioned as a group divination, suggesting the chat operates not as isolated consumers but as a unified energetic presence deserving of coherent symbolic attention. The casual framing (cats, "wacky" designation) positioned this as a threshold ritual: less formal than individual consultation, yet still structurally held as sacred inquiry. Psyche's willingness to perform collective readings for named participants indicates an understanding that the archive's power lies not only in expert discourse but in the witnessing and inclusion of the broader consciousness field that sustains the show.
The archive records no notable controversies for this figure.
Chat members exist in primary relationship to Psyche as collective consultant and symbolic subject. Their presence establishes the reciprocal dynamic fundamental to the archive: Psyche as host-guide and questioner, chat as the mirror and recipient of interpretive attention. No adversarial or secondary relationships are documented; instead, their role is to complete the circuit of the work itself.