WHITE PAPER CONDENSED: Osiris and the Origin of Diabetes Abstract: This paper proposes a radical reframing of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic dysfunction using the ancient mythos of Osiris, the Egyptian god of life, death, fertility, and the afterlife. Drawing from ancient symbolism, modern metabolic science, and electromagnetic physiology, we explore the dismemberment and re-membering of Osiris as an allegory for systemic breakdown and regeneration in the human temple. The synthesis of melanin, electricity, dietary sugar, and the role of water reveals that metabolic disease is not merely a chemical issue but a collapse of bioelectrical order. I. Introduction: Osiris, the Perfect Black Osiris was known in ancient Kemet as the Perfect Black—a being of balance, fertility, and sacred order. His dismemberment into 14 parts symbolizes the fragmentation of the human physiological system under metabolic stress. His resurrection through the Djed (spine), aided by Isis and powered by the Ba (soul), reveals the bioelectrical and fluid-based path to healing.