
Before entering my story—and your journey through the Sky-Veil with Joan of Arc—enjoy “Most Charming Shade," my poem set to music. From my album, The House of New Bethany. Visit my music site at WalterEmerson.com.
There was a life before, and there was a life after.
Before: the climb. Degrees from the finest schools. Impressive titles. A string of superficial successes strung together like medals. I had mastered the shape of a certain kind of life—how to walk into boardrooms, how to give impressive presentations to CEOs, how to belong in the company of ambition. My resume was the envy of many. I lived in a New York City high-rise, traveled the world, and made excellent cocktail party talk. People liked me. I was a good conversationalist and had a warm sense of humor. It all worked, until it didn’t.
Everything that had once named me fell away. Profession, reputation, finances, sense of self—I lost them, one by one. What remained was the silence. And in that silence, something—or someone—was waiting.
She had been with me longer than I knew. Years before, as a teenager, I stood before a statue of Joan of Arc while in France. I didn’t understand what moved in me then. I only remember the stillness. The face. The armor. The aura. The sensation that something essential was behind the image.
Decades later, in the aftermath of collapse, she returned—not as an idea of my subjective imagination, but as silent presence in my world. What confronted me was hypostatic, not imaginative.1 She saturated my heart with hope and gifted me with clarity. She did not promise earthly security, only suffering that I could entrust to God. However, she offered a treasure: the truth of what I had become, and the glimmer of what I might become, if I followed.
So I did.

Everything since has unfolded under her banner. My life became a journey—not toward recovering my former worldly “success,” but toward a transformation in Christ. With Joan, and her heavenly sister St. Thérèse, I walked through obscurity. I walked through solitude. I took the long way around every paradigm and certainty I had once clung to. More recently, other figures began to rise from somewhere older, quieter, and even more elemental.
In March 2024, days after visiting the holy tomb and grotto of St. Mary Magdalene in southern France, I stood beneath the dome of the Pantheon in Rome. Light poured in through the oculus like a breath from some forgotten age. The air shimmered. And in that moment, I felt something stir—a thread pulling taut, reaching back not just through faith, but through time itself.
Soon after our return home, my wife and I both felt the call of the Holy Spirit to begin daily Mass, monthly confession, and to fulfill the First Friday and First Saturday devotions of reparation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. We accomplished that without interruption over the next nine months.
During this time, I was deeply inspired to immerse myself in both my pre-existing Heidegger studies and in ancient Greco-Roman mythology. I began to see the outlines more clearly. Aphrodite, as the hypostatic presence2 of divine beauty and love breaking through the ruins of my life. Athena, the courageous presence of wisdom and resolve, gifting silent guidance. Hera, composed and majestic, embodying the quiet dignity of sovereignty reclaimed in a broken man.
Enjoy “Athena, Hera, Aphrodite,” my poem set to music on my album, Mythic Revelations (Rock Opera Remix). Visit my music site at WalterEmerson.com.
They emerged, as hypostatic heralds of my own epic story, slowly out of the mist, through the contours of the path Joan had led me on. They were modes of the revealing of Being, shimmering in alethic wonder, revealing that the longing written into the hearts of the ancient Greco-Romans through myth was not opposed to truth—it was its shadow, waiting for the light.
This is the story of that shadow and that light.
Not a system. Not a sermon. Not a doctrine. Just a man who lost everything, followed a girl in armor, sensed the heralds of antiquity and began to see his life—not as something to rebuild, but as something to rewrite.
By “hypostatic,” I refer to a mode of presence that is neither imaginary nor metaphorical, but real in the order of Being—something that confronts the soul with substantial weight, though not necessarily in physical or personal form. In this context, “hypostatic” echoes its theological roots (as in the hypostatic union of Christ), denoting not a creature or entity, but a form of Being that bears presence. The Being of Joan of Arc, as encountered here, is not a product of imagination but a threshold of divine unveiling—an actual, if veiled, confrontation with sanctity breaking through the Sky-Veil. It is poetic, yes, but it is poetry grounded in metaphysical truth.
A hypostatic presence is not an imagined figure, nor a constructed symbol, but a real mode of Being encountered inwardly—a substantial form that reveals itself to the soul in stillness, vision, or contemplation. It is not seen with the physical eye, nor invented by the mind, but is recognized by the deeper faculties of spiritual perception: the heart, the memory, the longing shaped by grace.
In this way, hypostatic presence is the form through which Being confronts the soul without taking the shape of a being. It does not speak as a person, but it speaks. It does not move as a figure, but it moves. It may wear the veil of myth, the shimmer of memory, or the aura of symbol, but it presses upon the soul with real weight—calling, shaping, and disclosing what lies beyond mere imagination.
In the contemplative journey across the Sky-Veil, such presences act as guides, harbingers, or thresholds. They are encountered, not conceived. Their truth is not measured by proof, but by the depth of transformation they bring.
To meet a hypostatic presence is to stand before a mystery that is more than image but less than incarnation—a flicker of eternity caught in the symbolic texture of time.
Truly beautiful Walter. This will be your best work, the culmination of everything—I feel it.
This is a beautiful story. I love it!