Why this word is great
INFLESH — [Verb] To give fleshly form; to incarnate. From the prefix in- ("into") + flesh ("physical form"). Unlike "incarnate" (often reserved for the divine assuming mortal shape) or "embody" (which abstracts an idea into form), "inflesh" is the raw, unadorned act of becoming meat. It is the sculptor’s clay warming under his hands, the ghost story thickening into a figure at the foot of the bed, or the moment a metaphor—say, "heartache"—suddenly blooms into an actual, crushing weight behind the ribs. To inflesh is to remember that every spirit, given time, will eventually bow to biology.