I have been reading about an analogy for reality Miguel Serrano calls the "Cosmic Diaphragm". Using the idea of a great being exhaling and breathing back - in order to explain creation. This simple analogy has helped me understand some profound truths that I am slowly working out how to articulate.
As this theory goes: We begin with a golden age. The closer Creation is (in time) to the 'being that exhales', to the exhalation itself, the more divine and sublime it will be, a 'higher vibratory nature of reality'. As it progresses it condenses into the material.
Our very understanding of the world, the nature of Jewry, it is all a result of this condensation of reality into matter. Ancients spoke of Om or the word of God to explain this truth. It could be described as involution. There are some though that can apparently connect to this golden age, as time itself is cyclical, and infinite, and has no bearing on dates or years.Next comes the great inhalation during which the created are reabsorbed. This analogy is a perfect way to describe the nature of reality. a "COSMIC DIAPHRAGM OR LUNG" Equal to itself, eternal.
The real profundity of this cannot be overstated. It explains the nature of reality itself, and of our nature as thinking beings immersed in matter, it explains why thought and imagination work the way they do, it explains myths like Atlantis, it explains the endless cycles we exist in. A transcendent view of reality, so difficult to explain in language, in material words. Experiential. According to Serrano: Hyperborea itself exists "beyond the material condensation of energy "
The Earth (as an actual being, rather than just a rock in space, or just a place) works in the same way, which is why the inner earth can't be reached via the material plane, but it can be connected with unconsciously, which is why strange things happen at the poles. Our people were not sun worshippers, they worshipped the 'sun beyond the sun' - this is one interpretation of what the black sun means.
According to this view: Everything in existence is a material reflection of its divine essence. The material understanding of reality we moderns have is but a facet of existence. The very nature of mind, the novelty inherent in life, these things hint at the existence of a reality far deeper than consciousness itself.
The Greeks understood this, Nietzsche understood this, Hitler understood this. This is what being "Aryan" actually means, connecting with this ‘supra-conscious’ "memory in the blood" on levels our consciousness can only begin to grasp with immense difficulty, but once connected with: impossible to ignore. I take a stance against materialism for this reason: Reality exists beyond our consciousness, not within it - our conscious rationalizations are but a part of what makes up existence, yet in modernity we pretend we have encompassed it all by describing the mechanics of things.
This comes around to why Nietzsche's 'philosophy of the body' is so important, because the only means we have to connect with the true nature of reality is via the subconscious/unconscious, or the spirit – which is housed in the body, in the self beyond ourselves - not the mind. Art, music, fitness, war. These connect to an existence greater than our ability to consciously grasp it. That faustian ‘infinite’ feeling that Spengler discussed in Decline of the West. The modern separation of mind and body is a direct reflection of the degradation (or involution) of reality itself.
Even science, which did get 'Jewified" for a bit there is turning towards things like Multiverse theory, and Holographic universe theory (and yes failing really to truly grasp what these conceptions mean), because reality itself isn't reducible, that is a Jewish/Materialist trait. To go back to the analogy: the 'great breath' is spent and now things must shift the other way.
Modern religions seem so trite and shallow because they're material echoes of the real spirituality they once were. This is because the collective unconscious has shifted towards the material, but the cycle must continue to spiral, infinitely, Nietzsche called this the Eternal Return. Oswald Spengler suggested all cultures go through this process, of birth, awareness, and eventual decline - according to him our culture is about to go through a ‘Caesar stage’, and due to the nature of Aryan (Faustian) man - our Caesar stage is likely to be a world-encompassing phenomenon.
We're at what I like to call the great swing of the pendulum, the most 'material' aspect of the cycle, at which god or spirit SEEMS furthest away. The material is certainly real, and I'm not simply suggesting that we can simply imagine more; I'm suggesting that reality itself has 'condensed', and once existed at a much higher level (of vibration basically), and I suspect it is going to again. Take what you will from this analogy, I found it a useful way to discuss certain topics.
The end of this material age will bring a new sort of spirituality, and it is our people that are meant to usher in this new golden age - we are the people that tend to see ‘beyond the horizon’ for a reason. I already see the birth of this world-view now in people like us. A new culture itself is being born.
This time, the world!