Chapter Thirty Six: Pain

My name is Goodwill Harpen, and I came from the world of Fantasy. I live for about fifty two years inside the Lores of Fantasy in the past, and I am here to give a solemn testimony about pain as revealed to us by the mysterious institution of the Lore of Commons.

It was a period of great success when the world of Fantasy would ultimately triumph in discovering the crucial knowledge of space, work, and energy forces as they relate to a specified period of time. During those years, the knowledge about space and its many miraculous properties were still unknown to the many modes of inquiry, and its absolute existence is yet to be determined other than what is known about the faith adored with enough passion, including the present hope that all energy sources emanate from all the wondrous composition of the circumstances that reflects the power of love.

The radiation coming from love was the first to be identified and isolated for the purpose of a more in-depth inquiry; for the work of Fantasy to be truly effective, it must first identify the source as well as the many components in the hypothesis that allow love to travel through space and assume the dynamics of the First Theorem of Love, which pertains to its invisible character.


But while further study is put into the more puzzling characteristics of space from where the First Theorem of Love was formulated, it was the Second Theorem of Love that gained prominence at the time, which states that any love unrequited will result to pain, and the magnitude of the pain is equal to the same intensity of the love received, but unreturned.

This is a very peculiar statement of any law pertaining to nature and the natural course of things, where love is to be identified with the impetus that created everything, because love is generally regarded as the invisible element that quantifies creation to be of the same substance capable of making an impact, and returning, from where its importance is practically derived.

Pain becomes a very curious thing (a vague concept) to be experienced, because anything where love resides should automatically be reciprocated with the same intensity, otherwise anything that violates such equality will result to a certain form of disorder that will constructively violate the divine nature of love.

Since the universe is created with a scientific order from the very beginning, it was easily dismissed that the Second Theorem of Love does not state a natural relationship of the substantive love with respect to all things created, but simply a hypothetical solution that can be proposed to any form of imbalance that may occur in the future, if such condition occuring was, indeed, possible.

So for many years, the world of Fantasy disregarded the practical application of the second law from where pain was metaphysically defined within purely theoretical limitations, until certain disorder happened in the process of identifying the utility of space, and the discovery of their most prized colony, to be known today as the Ministry of Space.

While the symptoms of this certain chaos was dismissed to be immaterial, the eventual discovery of the dimension linking to the opening of a highway to the Galactic civilization gave way to the formulation of the Third Theorem of Love, which states that love is the indestructible source of everything created or what is known as the immortal property of love.

But as is the case of all the many things to be identified by human and fictional reasoning, pain becomes a predominant element in the many conflicts that defined disorder in the history of the world of Fantasy to the point of excessive inequalities created within the confines of the preservation and conservation of love, indestructible and immortal, forever unchanged in intention and efficacy.

It was later on revealed too late that the Lore of Commons was the ultimate source of this disorder. I was an eyewitness to this testimony.

x---------x

Picture from Pexels.

Comments

Popular Posts