Episode 2: The Sagging cover art

Episode 2: The Sagging

Episode 2: The Sagging

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Episode Synopsis: “The Sagging” Dispatches from Kint – Episode 2In the aftermath of “The Event,” the world of Kint continues its quiet, dignified struggle with instability: physical, emotional, and gravitational. The narrator reports that the atmosphere itself seems uncertain of its duties, folding and refolding like a piece of paper trying to remember what it was meant to be. Gravity, too, has grown temperamental, responding not to mass but to mood. Objects fall only when they feel unseen.


As the mysterious phenomenon known as the Sagging spreads, reality begins to droop at its edges. Walls lean inward as though confiding secrets. Clocks, unsure of the direction of time, keep hours by temperament rather than precision. Even shadows have begun to slide away from their owners. The King, whose existence remains largely theoretical, issues a decree that citizens should braid their hair, or each other’s, as a symbolic act of coherence.


Scientists debate whether the Sagging is caused by magnetogravitic drift from the meteor that once restructured the Earth’s core, or by something more abstract, the slow compression of unfinished meanings. Both explanations are approved for public recitation, because in Kint, truth is a matter of tone.


The narrator reflects on the strange inheritance left by the old world’s engineers, the so-called Knowledge Integration and Normalization Taskforce (K.I.N.T.), who once sought to preserve logic itself. Their archives survived, mostly, but the new world no longer fits the blueprints they saved. Meaning behaves unpredictably, migrating between sentences and weather patterns.Through it all, the citizens of Kint adapt with tenderness and humor.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.