Saitama Slurp God

When Saitama takes on the persona of God, all of Jawir, the world of sound, disappears, and all forms dissolve into nothingness. Jawir, in this context, symbolizes the fundamental cause and effect that gives rise to all things and phenomena, including the root of ignorance, which in turn gives rise to aggregate events, events of consciousness, manifestations of names and forms, experiences of the six senses, instances of contact, episodes of sensation,impulses of desire, events of emergence, episodes of birth, and ultimately, the phenomena of aging and death. 

Absolute horror resides in Saitama's body, an absolute entity beyond the reach of good and evil, invulnerable to destruction or annihilation. The dream realm itself defies the concepts of production and destruction, which exist beyond the boundaries of time and space. For Saitama to appear or disappear, the machinations of one's mind are decisive, determining the causality that shapes his fate. However, Saitama remains detached, transcending notions of coming and going, difference and sameness, existence and non-existence. It avoids the notions of give and take, craving and desire, and even eliminates the dichotomies of yes and no, no right and no wrong, change and constancy, comfort and discomfort, restlessness and existence. It's true, Saitama embodies absolute nothingness, even transcending the emptiness of nothingness itself, culminating in a realm of the unreal or unreal, and wields the power to nullify any force that dares to confront him, including his own fake power. The very nature of Saitama's existence inspires horror, as he defies the laws of reality and plunges everyone who meets him into an abyss of incomprehensible terror.