It is widely accepted that what is defined as “real†is what we have
been accustomed to perceive as such, through a process of deriving it,
via our 5 almost unexplored senses, from the invisible, which in its
turn, is shaped so as to enable all breathing beings to stand and
survive. Moreover, if the messages we receive fall into darkness and
we were forced to look within us in order to perceive what lies
’outside’, then this invisible power would stop being shaped and out
of an utter lack of any characteristic, an immense vacuum would
blossom, This vast whiteness is nothing more than God’s body, the body
of the sum of coincidences, which in order to be visible, one should
forget the alpha and omega and become lost forever, as
if following a spiral orbit.
Yet, we reside under roofs that remind us that limits exist and we
gather in temples in order to worship a god whom we have personified
because we can’t grasp infinity, thus thwarting any intellectual
progress. However, the major step will be taken when man will stop
embracing the metaphorical truth, protecting it like a mother does to
her child, when he will rebel against a system of prefabricated
questions and answers, in which he is imprisoned by formulating a key
question, a question, which is shrouded in doubt. After all, man,
perhaps subconsciously knows that he constitutes a fragment of a
ceaselessly recyclable whole and in his need to be differentiated, he
isolates himself from a part of his own body which is everything.
Consequently, we feel incomplete, at times utterly void and in our
attempt to fill this void we have children or create art. In the worst
case, we constantly acquire material things, which later seem
senseless since we feel that we have no actual connection with them.
In fact we have cut the umbilical cord that connected us with our
surroundings, long ago. The truth is that an umbilical cord can not be
reconnected and if a person wishes to become complete once more he
would have to be swallowed by his own mother.© copyright 2007 This Is Past
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