No dues. No dogma. No cosmic prerequisites.
Just a community of people who push the rock
and refuse to stop smiling.
This is not a church. This is not a club. This is a decision.
When you join The Absurd Assembly, you are making a quiet declaration: I see the void, and I choose to show up anyway. That’s it. That’s the whole initiation. No robes, no rituals, no secret handshake — though we’re not opposed to any of those if the mood strikes.
A Sisyphean is someone who has looked honestly at the universe — at its silence, its indifference, its spectacular refusal to explain itself — and decided that none of that is a reason to stop caring. In fact, it might be the best reason to care more.
We don’t promise enlightenment. We don’t promise peace. We promise that you will wake up every morning to a new reflection from one of twelve philosophers who wrestled with the same impossible question you’re wrestling with right now: how do I live a meaningful life in a world that won’t tell me what meaning is?
You will receive their answers. And slowly, between their words and your mornings, you will build your own.
Show up. Do the work. Not because someone is watching, not because the outcome is guaranteed, but because the act of pushing is where meaning lives. The rock doesn’t need to reach the top. You need to reach for it.
When the rock rolls back — and it will — refuse to let that be a tragedy. Let it be a beginning. Sisyphus is not a cautionary tale. He is a rebellion against despair. Your smile is not denial. It is defiance.
We do not invent false comforts. We do not pretend the universe cares. Intellectual honesty is sacred here. If something is true, say it. If something is uncertain, sit with that. The Absurd demands courage, not certainty.
Meaning is not found. It is constructed — carefully, deliberately, and sometimes from nothing at all. Read. Reflect. Practice. One philosopher, one quote, one moment of stillness per day. That is enough. That is everything.
Sisyphus pushes alone, but you don’t have to. A Sisyphean notices when someone else’s rock has gotten heavier. We hold space for doubt, for struggle, for questions that don’t have answers. That’s what a congregation is — people who show up for each other.
A morning reflection from one of twelve philosophers across six traditions. One quote, one essay, one practice. Every day for a year. Free, forever.
Philosopher guides, weekly sermons, meditation scripts, essays on absurdism, stoicism, existentialism, Buddhism, and more. All written for humans, not academics.
Take the quiz to discover your philosophical alignment. Learn which tradition resonates with how you already see the world — then explore the ones that challenge it.
Absurdist wedding scripts, naming ceremonies, memorials, and seasonal observances. Real rituals for people who don’t believe in rituals but understand why they matter.
The Sisyphean Breath. The Stoic Morning. The Middle Way. Audio-guided meditations drawn from philosophical traditions, designed for people who think too much.
You are not alone in finding the universe absurd. Sisypheans exist everywhere — in coffee shops, in cubicles, in quiet moments of wondering. Now you know where to find them.
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You just joined a community of people who looked at the meaningless universe and said: “Fine. I’ll make my own.”
Your first daily devotional arrives tomorrow morning. In the meantime: