We Decide Our Fate © Surazeus 2024 05 01 The Liberty we gain as human beings through the cognitive function of our brains, which analyze things we perceive as ideas, provides freedom of our hope-driven minds to experience wide range of psychic states so we choose to become angels or demons. Though we are bound to matrix of this world as quick organic entities of atoms, constrained by physical laws of proaction, we might exercise strict freedom of choice once we understand wide variable range of possible actions we can perform. Our universe of stars and worlds is formed of atoms swerving in the boundless void, which congregate into quick molecules, so chemicals compose organic beings whose brains dream virtual model of the world as they seek how to generate new life. Our universe is vast structure of atoms woven by electrons in rings of power that spiral into coils of active genes which bloom into bodies of conscious beings who see process of action and reaction which construct or destruct structures of things. Though physical laws of nature define how chemicals construct and destruct things with patterns that control how matter flows, we can steer journey our bodies enforce to slightly evade predetermined fate through free choice to swerve along way of change. Through measurement of form-exploring minds we can perceive commensurate designs which we organize with linguistic code in categories of mental ideas to program language of conceptual thoughts allowing our souls to communicate. Once we know well how our bodies evolve four hundred million years of love from fish to newt to mouse to cat to ape to human, we can transcend with vision of world view, as wingless angels striving to become god, through freedom to create and not destroy. Through Liberty of mental comprehension, with minds open to wide varieties of possible experiences, our souls may bloom as creative angels of love or wither as greedy demons of hate, so through our choices we decide our fate.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
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