White and black

We could call it a trilogy, this series of books evolved with the author. There is a common thread between the first text, “The Natural Man and Woman”, the second “The Key to Time” and this last book.Like the female trinity the author speaks of, all three texts taken individually, have their own soul, the last one also contains the other two, like a woman expecting a child. For it is of gestation and genesis that this text speaks, of the sacredness of the passage between one condition and another: the twilight of the gods. It is the passages, the transformations, the changes of dimension and state that make us unique in this human dimension. Could physiological birth, not interfered with by intrusive gazes, be the solution to a paradigm shift? Too simple? For the author it is not. More than ten thousand years of interference and interpretation of the high of birth, have made the individual disconnected, dissociated, neurotic and alienated, blocking then, in the course of life, all the other steps of condition, a never really born and so for entire generations, creating a separate reality, polaristic, made of extremes. And so deep questions emerge. Does a duality really exist or is it simply a perception of reality functional to evolution? Like two twins separated at birth, in the action of opposites, black and white, Light and Darkness? Have we really arrived at the end of time, in bringing those twins back together, in union and harmony, finding the bridge of communication in duality? Because one aspect is duality, lived and experienced in the freedom of this plane that has nothing to do with the extreme polarism or absolutism that we have created, in the lust for power, building the illusion of being superior to Creation, feeling ownership of something or someone. A multi-layered book of understanding, as much spiritual as material, as low as high, accepting gravity as an expression of the Great Mother and living one’s Time as a Father. The human experience is not interpretable, it is simply to be lived.

What they say about my books