The Theater
"Come
and see, and be part of the play of life tonight!"
Conveniently
forgetting how curiosity killed the cat we came and entered the theater to
take up our part in the play of life.
We
signed the contract for our participation in the play of life forgetting to
read the small print, and rushed in with great anticipation of this
unique experience.
And so,
as we entered the theater we walked unto a large stage.
On the stage there was a large variety of mirrors, every single one of them
reflecting a distorted image.
Next to the mirrors there were rods.
If
anyone did not agree with the image in the mirror, the rod came down and hit
the dissident as often as was necessary to change the attitude from rejection
into acceptance.
As we
walked onto the stage we were obliged to wear suits.
These
suits looked like clown-suits, the kind of garment associated with the joker in a
card game.
These
suits had strings attached to them.
Since the background of the stage was dark and we all were taken in by the sight of the new costumes none of us noticed the strings.
The more
the strings were used, or the more you would fight the pull on the strings, the stronger they became.
The few who became aware of the presence of the strings could see them going up into the dark loft of the theater where unknown forces in the dark were manipulating the strings.
Although we could not distinctly discern their shape we could definitely feel their presence in the dark unknown by the way they pulled on the strings.
On stage there was a huge complex of wheels interacting with each other.
Each
character was expected to take up its place in a wheel and spin it around.
We were assigned the task of being cogs keeping the wheels in motion.
Together
the wheels were part of the contraption reaching up into the dark loft where we could
only see the contours of a revolving wheel.
It was
not possible to see exactly what function it had, but it was clear to everyone
that we were the ones who were supposed to keep this wheel going round, and
somehow this wheel was tied in with the play in the theater.
The
wheels on stage are dangerous because once you get on one of them, it is hard
to step off without injuring yourself.
Once
they draw you in, their gravity pull makes it hard to escape from them.
You have
to yank your way out of a wheel, and you usually end up falling flat on your
face.
Some
wheels have a greater gravity pull than others.
The
pharmaceutical wheel is like a black hole devouring all those who get too
close.
The
medicine based solutions offered by the priests on this wheel claim to
stretch the lifespan of those taking the medicine.
But if
prolongation of your life means you have to be glued together by artificial
means to keep you from falling apart, producing all manner of other problems in
the process, then what is the point of living in that state?
Besides
that, I found myself wondering what the point is of stretching your lifespan if
it means prolonging the torture of being a living sacrifice in the service of
the great big wheel of medical lies.
To make
sure most of the actors on the stage are drawn in to the pharmaceutical wheel
of magic, they are placed in an environment which is designed to make them ill.
They
first have to create the string of need for medicine before they can draw
people in.
And so,
to the actors in this play poison is given for food.
Just as
their bodies are fed with this deadly poison, their minds and spirits also are
intoxicated by the poisonous atmosphere of the stage.
The
mirrors show the actors a vision which presents the poisonous artificial food and
medicine as good and constructive to the health of their bodies and their minds.
The
poison does not kill them at once, but it begins to manifest itself over a
period of years as the exposure to the toxin produces fruit after its nature.
Those
who fail to comply with the reflection of their image in the mirrors all too
often end up in correctional institutes.
If
school did not work, and the workplace did not make them change their minds,
then prison or a psychiatric hospital will force them into the position of cogs
which keep the wheel moving around.
And of
course the psychiatric hospital is just a subsidiary wheel of the greater
pharmaceutical wheel.
All
wheels are interconnected, even if they seem disconnected on the surface.
Once the
actors step unto the pharmaceutical wheel, they are given masked medicine.
The
medicine wears the mask of being a cure while in truth it obscures the symptoms
and compounds the problem.
In that
capacity medicine is just part of another corrupt mirror.
Once you
stepped unto this wheel, it's impossible to escape unscathed.
It is
not uncommon for people to leave this wheel only after they have deposited all
of their life-energy in service of spinning this wheel around in endless circles.
They
step on this wheel alive, but they are carried off the wheel in a wooden box.
But
since we are replaceable, the mighty ones treat us as disposable commodities,
fuel for their engine.
So if
one cog is carried off stage in a wooden box, a new cog takes up its place.
As I was
led across the stage, I noticed how most players started to identify with their
suits and its strings.
They
fully accepted the image which the mirrors reflected back at them and proudly
wore the mask in the image of the mirror.
Because
they now walked around in joker suits wearing an artificial mask which made
them look compatible with the standards of the mirrors, their character and
their hearts began to change in the image of the mirror, the mask and the fabric
of their suits.
They
could no longer see themselves as they were, for all of them wore glasses which
were derived from the mirrors.
These
glasses made it possible for them to accept and believe the image the mirrors
reflected back at them as truth.
Oddly
enough, whereas they might have had a vivacious glistening look in their eyes when
they entered the theater, as they moved through the paces of the play their
eyes began to change.
The
vivacious look hardened and grew into a two-dimension flat wooden representation
of what eyes are supposed to look like, as if someone painted eyes on the masks
they wore.
As they
grow into marionettes indistinguishable from their wooden counterparts, they
receive a multitude of rewards on the stage in a great variety of ways.
They
receive approval, encouragement, affirmation, awards, benefits, comfort, a
place all for themselves on the big wheel.
It did
not take long for me to experience my clown suit as a straightjacket, hindering
me from being myself on the stage.
I did
not feel at ease in this tight-roped straightjacket moving me in directions
where I did not want to go.
Furthermore,
whenever the mirror reflected back an image at me, I could see that this image
was not a reflection of who I truly was.
Instead,
I noticed the distortion and I rejected it as a true image because of the
corruption in the image.
I
refused to accept the image in the mirror just as I refused to wear the mask.
My
refusal came with a price tag.
Because
I failed to fit into the mold, I was hit by the rods of the mirrors many times,
and they wounded me to the point where they crippled me.
I could no
longer walk straight.
Since I
did not function well as a cog, they put the label of failure on my suit, which
made me eligible for more punishment due to my failure to conform.
I was
amazed and saddened when I realized how
I had been part of a crowd of people entering the theater simultaneously, yet
although we were alike in the beginning, the play of life somehow affected us
to the extent that we became polar opposites.
How
could they have forgotten who they were before entering the theater?
They do
not just act out a part they are supposed to play, but they BECOME the part and
change in the image of the part.
They
move through the maze of mirrors and learn to become the mask they put on their
heads for approval, taking up their place as cogs in the machinery of the great
big wheel.
If a forlorn memory of their true face surfaces and stand in painful contrast with the mask they wear, the pharmaceutical wheel will send them the miracle cure to get rid of the pain and come to terms with their mask existence.
And coming to terms always means acceptance and being at peace with it.
I
probably was the biggest failure on the stage of life, although I could see a
few others who also were struggling with this play the same way as I was.
How can
anyone accept the lies of the mirrors when you KNOW that they are just lies?
How
could I wear a mask in front of my face and think of it as my own countenance?
I did
not like this place.
It was
full of lies and corruption.
Furthermore,
those who worship the lie make life hard for those who love truth.
Additionally
I became aware of how the strings maneuvered me towards a place on the big
wheel where I did not belong.
I could
feel the strings pulling on me, and whereas the others looked only at each
other I began to look upwards to see how the strings worked, and who was
pulling them.
As the strings
weakened and I increasingly failed to take up my position as a cog on the
stage, I was alienated even further from the scene of the stage, cashing in
more punishment for my incompatibility.
I was
forced to witness how the wooden servants of the lie were given prerogatives
and all the means they could possible need, while those with skills and talents
yet whose hearts are incompatible with the lie were forced to sit on the
sidelines, all too often forced to work under the most adverse conditions.
The
marionettes had no use for the means given to them because all they ended up
doing is using the means as a contribution to the sacrifice of their life in
service of keeping the great big wheel in motion, enticing other souls to follow their example and do
likewise.
But,
that is perhaps the very reason why they received the rewards: they worked in
service of the great big wheel whereas I was simply a misfit, an obstruction.
I never
gave much thought to the prerogative of living in a free world outside of the theater
when I was still part of it.
In the
real world we were not expected to wear masks or to wear suits with strings
attached that force us in a certain direction.
We were
free to go where we wanted to, we could have whatever we needed.
Maybe
that was part of the life-changing experience in the play of life: to learn to
look at real life with different eyes and a greater appreciation.
Maybe I
should not have been too eager to sign the contract for participation in the
play of life, maybe I should have bothered to read the small print.
But I
have not, like the others.
So, what
else can I do but act out my part in this theater of the damned?
To the
degree that I am able to rid myself from the pull of the strings I am able to
move freely.
I may be
useless as a cog in the big wheel, but the shadows somehow need my presence as
a stage prop in their circus.
That's
the irony: because I am outnumbered by the marionettes I appear to them as an
artificial stage prop which does not really have a part in the play of life.
But they
cannot see that they are the ones who reduce themselves to props for the force
of darkness by the choice they have made to conform and identify with the
darkness.
This
choice is what turns them into props on the stage of fools, surrendering their
life to the shadows so that they can come alive and dominate the play of life,
turning it into a dark and sinister play of death.
Yet the
stage is changing.
I have
noticed how the shadows are frantically moving around, re-arranging the stage
and changing the setting, sealing off doors and shutting off windows so that the
darkness increases and the remaining lights stands out in a far greater
contrast than ever before.
The
actors seem to merge with the part of being a marionette more rapidly than ever
before.
I have
never seen such a great number of flat, lifeless expressions on the faces I
meet, as if the stage is being taken over by the walking dead.
The
shadows are tinkering with the food on all levels, they change entertainment in
explicit perverse ways, health-care is made over into death-care, the dark god
of money literally rules over every aspect of the theater now, education is
designed to propagate and enforce the acceptance of more lies than ever before.
Even the
marionette costumes are tampered with genetically so that they literally can
suck souls into the strings into the dark more efficiently and swiftly than
ever before.
I also
noticed that something else comes down through the strings, and the genetic
modification of the suits is designed to facilitate and speed up the download
of this dark blob flowing down the strings into the suits.
At first
I thought that the forces of the dark were trying to prevent us from getting
out of the theater, turning the theater into a big prison.
Yet now
I realize they are not trying to keep us locked inside, but they are trying to
prevent something or Someone from entering in.
It seems
as if they plan to cut off this stage and the entire theater from the reality
of life outside the theater.
Maybe
the shadows are afraid of something coming onto the stage of life which will
threaten their power structure and the play they set in motion.
Maybe
they are afraid that a new play is to be set in motion on the stage which has
been their playground all this time.
They
cannot let that happen.
And so
if the play must go, then the theater must go.
They are
determined not to let anyone take over THEIR theater.
No comments:
Post a Comment