The Omnipresent Curiosity

The Omnipresent Curiosity

A Story by Dayran
"

Tales of the Aryan Imperative : VI

"

 

 

 

 

The experience of omnipresence is not unknown to the inquiring mind of the rational individual. However in finding out about it, it doesn't reduce the glorious sensation of the experience as represented by the divine in us. The discovery transforms us from a skeptic to that of an informed individual about the many possibilities and combination of events that make such experiences a devout reality.

 

As man comes to categorically identify himself as human and not divine, he is brought to the view of the experience of omnipresence, in its many variations. As he views the experience, he relates it to his existing understanding of physical reality and forms a one view of it, relevant to his preoccupations of reason.

 

Today, this is achieved in his passions, in the experience of his individuality, his oneness and his principal social identities. In relation to his community, he may view himself as someone just like anyone else. In the social parlance, where he brings himself to say, ' I would have done the same in his position,' he experiences oneness. Even where he understands the actions of his enemy, sufficient to say, ' he had just cause,' he is in contact with the sensation. And the same is true when he realizes that what one mind can know so can another.

 

In experiencing these in the passions, the mind forms a scheme of understanding about it and we realize that had we not exercised our rationality at that point we may have been quite consumed by the enormity of the experience and in our alarm and melancholy, the rational views are transformed into something quite esoteric, with our passions on the tow with exclamations of rapture and ecstacy. It thereafter transforms into a phenomenon.

 

' To each man his own,' is another declaration of omnipresence. What everyman experiences is a truth to himself. Our studies do not deny us the balm of the passion's phenomenon. The omnipresence views our understanding and comes to peace. At last, it may be spared our doubts, incriminations, denials and other dramatic gestures, for it may have come home to stay.

 

 

 

© 2012 Dayran


My Review

Would you like to review this Story?
Login | Register




Share This
Email
Facebook
Twitter
Request Read Request
Add to Library My Library
Subscribe Subscribe


Stats

94 Views
Added on December 18, 2012
Last Updated on December 18, 2012

Author

Dayran
Dayran

Malacca, Malaysia



About
' Akara Mudhala Ezhuththellaam Aadhi Bhagavan Mudhatre Ulaku ' Translation ..... All the World's literature, Is from the young mind of the Original Experiencer. .. more..