When Coco First Came And The Dream Analogy

There seem to be a parallel between our experiences and the dreams we have, Carl Jung enlightens, He that looks outwards dreams. He that looks inwards awakes. That presupposes a sense of inner peace with what belongs and outside chaos for what doesn't. Although Gary made known the originator of this philosophical masterpiece to me, the evidence of veracity in its analogy caught my attention. Twi buttresses, 'nea ew) aniso) na y3de k) da y3 mu'. Which literally means what is seen is what is taken into our sleep. Seeing they say is believing but one can only see when they have access to a place and what comes with it.

In the dream several men seemed to care but none was given the mandate to go and bring what's 'necessary' for the act to conclude, till he arrived. Upon arrival, the environment spoke for itself and he had no option than to for what was 'required' to complete the task. Strange as it seems the 'required' could have been brought through other means but it wasn't. The she could have brought 'the required' but she didn't or should I say she couldn't. Consider coco, it could jump and land but it couldn't climb back until help came. Sometimes until help comes, wobbling, giggling, fidgeting and wailing seems options the desperate or handicapped can do.

Coco and her seem to be in the same quandary but coco lacked intelligence not to jump, she had and refused to jump until help came. The help they say had a charge to keep.