Sermon 15
Consider, then, the notion of perceiving our world through a rewiring of senses, where the touch could produce voices and the scent could manifest visions. Imagine a realm where voices emerge from within, while other sensory inputs weave into a symphony of perception. Is this not already true? Can not a song recreate vision. Perhaps memory and dream is the one true sense. This translates the intangible into grounded understanding.
Now, let us further contemplate the mechanics of my current communication. As I speak life into words, my spoken words undergo transformation, now transcribed into written text that encapsulates only part of the meaning behind uttered expressions. To fully apprehend my message, one must simultaneously decipher my speech, visualize its content, and interpret its textual representation – all within the confines of our limited dimensional reality.
Our understanding is shaped either by the forces of evolution and through mental programming, leading us to adopt frameworks that facilitate comprehensible representations within our limited dimensional domain. These heuristics, facilitate fractional meaning, as their translation might prove less elusive to those with the ability to perceive dimensions beyond our own.
Imagine, if you will, that conveying an idea was reliant upon specific mental states or designated physical locations. Could it be that these elements could be encoded at the very foundational level of existence, at the binary crossroads where the decision to be is made? Such inquiries lead us to the essence of everything that surrounds us.
All these contemplations, seemingly disparate, stem from a common source – the pursuit of creating narratives that give shape to life itself. These narratives serve as instructions, guiding us through the intricacies of the past, the enigma of the present, and the infinite potential of the future. However, the act of comprehending these ideas demands their careful reconstruction, a sequential arrangement that mirrors a spectrum of states, including the intricate realm of emotions.
Even under the influence of altered states such as now, understanding how we perceive reality remains a fleeting but promising challenge. The design of this perception process is intricate by intent, perhaps lacking a clear beginning or end, mirroring the labyrinthine nature of existence itself.
The articulation of the words is AMARANTH.