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Who Am I?

Updated: Oct 12


Yes—let’s get this part out of the way. I legally changed my name.

And no, I don’t take offense if you call me Brandon, BG, BGreen or any name tied to the steps of my becoming. Names are just markers of chapters, and I’ve lived many.               

Am I crazy? Absolutely. But as Morgan Wallen once sang, “I’m a little crazy, but the world’s insane.” If questioning the scripted, if learning, unlearning, and relearning what was manipulated or never taught makes me “crazy", then call me the GOAT!


Reclaiming lost blood, DNA, heritage, and history isn’t madness—it’s liberation in a world built on illusion. Shoutout to every root and memory—

To my people in North Carolina: Chapel Hill, Raleigh, Durham, Fuquay-Varina, Garner, Fayetteville, Willow Springs, and Holly Springs. To my people in El Dorado, Arkansas. To my people in Bowling Green, Kentucky. And to my people in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Every town, every step—just a sacred phase, a stone beneath my feet on the path toward something greater. 


Euphrates: A name that echoes through ages, as ancient as humanity itself. Its waters mirror my old soul. As the Earth shifts and the river recedes, truths long buried emerge, calling us to rediscover our place in space-time. Through rise and fall, birth and decay, every cell learns, unlearns, and learns again — a reflection of creation’s endless flow.


Bridging the gap between continents and consciousness, the "old" and the "new," "ancient" and "modern", "micro" and "macro". Euphrates serves as a valve linking science and religion to our soul, sole, and soil. This network reflects the dynamic balance between the Left/Western Hemisphere and Right/Eastern Hemisphere, uniting the physical and the metaphysical in a continuous flow of knowledge and existence—connecting all living beings in a shared, sacred unity.                           

 

Deaun: Spelled uniquely

The name Dion or Deon has origins in both Greek and French traditions. Here's a breakdown:

Greek Origin

  • Meaning: Derived from the name Dionysios, which means "of Dionysus." Dionysus is the Greek god of wine, revelry, and fertility in Greek mythology.

  • Usage: In ancient Greece, Dion was also associated with the city of Dion, located at the foot of Mount Olympus, which was an important religious center dedicated to Zeus.

French Origin

  • Meaning: In French, Dion is often a surname. It may have originated from a place name or be a diminutive form of Diodon, which means "gift of God" (from the Greek elements dios, "of Zeus," and doron, "gift").


Catawnee: A Name Rooted in Sacred Soil

Catawnee is more than a name—it’s a whisper from the land, a living thread tied to the ancestral spirits of the Southeastern woodlands. Thought to be inspired by the heritage of the Catawba people, “Catawnee” echoes the voice of a region rich with Indigenous legacy, resilience, and wisdom. The Catawba, known as “the river people,” have long lived along the Catawba River in what is now North and South Carolina. Their story, like many Indigenous nations, is marked by survival in the face of colonization, disease, forced removal (not everyone went onto reservations and LOST their identity doing so), and cultural erasure. And yet, they endure. Today, the federally recognized Catawba Nation continues to preserve its language, its famed pottery, and its sacred connection to the land.

But the legacy Catawnee draws from doesn’t stop there. A once lost name being restored as the river flows with continuous knowledge and wisdom.


The Carolinas were once home to a constellation of tribes, each a vital thread in the region’s spiritual and historical tapestry. The Cherokee, guardians of the Appalachian highlands, held rich traditions in storytelling and medicine. The Lumbee, are the largest tribe in North Carolina without full federal recognition but with deep cultural roots and an enduring identity. The Tuscarora, fierce and deeply spiritual, were pushed northward but left an indelible mark on the land. The Saponi, Occaneechi, and Waccamaw also called these lands home, shaping the region’s rhythm with their ceremonies, languages, and ways of life.


For Catawnee, adopting this name is a form of homage. It’s a conscious reflection of ancestral power, of honoring not just one tribe, but a regional legacy of resistance and reverence to REVEAL the millions of souls tied to the water and land. It speaks to the spirit of someone who refuses to forget, who chooses to walk forward with the wisdom of those who came before, and who holds space for the often-overlooked truths of Indigenous history. The name "Catawnee" becomes a symbol—not of ownership, but of alignment. It embodies a mission to restore what was fractured, to educate with intention, and to carry ancestral echoes into modern awakening.


"The deception of the most high is managed by man to create division and destruction, to reduce and dismantle our divine temple... Shutting down the divinity that was born to illuminate our spirit to change and transcend all matter - Life and death, time and space, love and hate." -E.D.C.

 



 
 
 

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