Wolfjk, we tend to accept that the body requires to rest to re-energise itself and this we readily believe but the brain seems to remain alert at all times, indeed it has to, and part of its function appears to help us to come to terms with the circumstance in which we find ourselves. but, even when there is nothing to concern oneself over, or to make us deleriously happy, the brain still needs to latch on to some incident, irrespective of how inconsequential, to help keep it functional. The brain and the body are symbiotic. The brain seems to be the part of our being that keeps us connected to our spiritual genesis. Religion (as society knows it) has no part in this miraculus conception to which we are its witnesses. It was only when I began to appreciate the skill involved in the drafting of allegories that I recognised their structural connection to dreams when it became reasonably evident that the allegorical form of communication probably arose from the dream (or subconscious) world.
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