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you know, that if you squint your eyes, and look at an object that emits light? the light travels from the source, just above your eye, impregnating your cranium with a brain? funny... isn't it? all it takes is keeping one eye closed, and squinting your other open eye... and when looking at an object that's the source of light, be it a street light, or the scimitar moon, the rays of light, passing your camel's eye-lashes end up projected into your forehead, rather than directly into your eye... squinting your eye while watching the moon, you see it, a beam of light never really entering your pupil of the eye, but travelling straight up "echo chamber" of your mind... i think that people discovered they had brains, but sitting and squinting at the moon with only one eye... look here, a minotaur cyclops... feeling he over-did-it with his camel lashes, thinking himself: a venitian blinds' salesman... i'm starting to see the use of psychedelics as a bit pointless... steve jobs was just lucky... the source of refraction of light doesn't enter the eye directly, it always travels just above the eye into the forehead region... i never tried it with the sun directly, then again, i'm wondering that sort of element exists on the moon, that allows the moon, a dull grey surface to act like a mirror, and be able to provide the suggestion of: pythagoras on the moon... apollo 13, go! find me the element that acts as a mirror, for light to bend! to bounce off the moon, and enter the sphere of night, i'll give you cooprdinates: in the range of red, yellow, orange, and white... as sometimes in seeing the moon guised... what element allows the moon to bounce off light? so the night might become illuminated? please forget mars... answer me this simple quetion... i want to know, what on the moon, acts as a mirror, that allows solar beams of photons to bounce off it, and illuminate the night sky? can we start thinking about capturing this question, storing it, and asking whether it can be used to propel an object outside of its natural orbit? leave but one eye open, and squinting, and look at a source of light, the light never travels directly into the pupil of your eye... it always travels just above the eye, onto your forehead, to suggest: the illumination of the mind.
0
Aug 15, 2017
Aug 15, 2017 at 8:33 PM UTC
squint eye of a minotaur cyclops
you know, that if you squint your eyes, and look at an object that emits light? the light travels from the source, just above your eye, impregnating your cranium with a brain? funny... isn't it? all it takes is keeping one eye closed, and squinting your other open eye... and when looking at an object that's the source of light, be it a street light, or the scimitar moon, the rays of light, passing your camel's eye-lashes end up projected into your forehead, rather than directly into your eye... squinting your eye while watching the moon, you see it, a beam of light never really entering your pupil of the eye, but travelling straight up "echo chamber" of your mind... i think that people discovered they had brains, but sitting and squinting at the moon with only one eye... look here, a minotaur cyclops... feeling he over-did-it with his camel lashes, thinking himself: a venitian blinds' salesman... i'm starting to see the use of psychedelics as a bit pointless... steve jobs was just lucky... the source of refraction of light doesn't enter the eye directly, it always travels just above the eye into the forehead region... i never tried it with the sun directly, then again, i'm wondering that sort of element exists on the moon, that allows the moon, a dull grey surface to act like a mirror, and be able to provide the suggestion of: pythagoras on the moon... apollo 13, go! find me the element that acts as a mirror, for light to bend! to bounce off the moon, and enter the sphere of night, i'll give you cooprdinates: in the range of red, yellow, orange, and white... as sometimes in seeing the moon guised... what element allows the moon to bounce off light? so the night might become illuminated? please forget mars... answer me this simple quetion... i want to know, what on the moon, acts as a mirror, that allows solar beams of photons to bounce off it, and illuminate the night sky? can we start thinking about capturing this question, storing it, and asking whether it can be used to propel an object outside of its natural orbit? leave but one eye open, and squinting, and look at a source of light, the light never travels directly into the pupil of your eye... it always travels just above the eye, onto your forehead, to suggest: the illumination of the mind.
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Aug 15, 2017
Aug 15, 2017 at 8:33 PM UTC
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