Can transference take place if the one desired remains? How can one become the other if the other remains? If a transference truly takes place, how could the one desired remain? There is no way that the desired one could remain. So what becomes of that one, the other one, the one that was the object of desire? In the transference, does that one not lose identity and become 'no one'? Can transference truly take place if desired one remains? If Reality is what is desired, can desire alter Reality or does desire alter only the one desiring to become Reality, to become God? If Reality is desired, does this in any way change Reality? Of course not, there is no way creation can change Reality or even touch Reality in any way. For one reason, creation and Reality are not in the same level or same degree or same dimension, in other words, in the same mode of existence, for existence is not possible for image. As the host of the image, Reality can have an effect on creation for creation images Reality. Creation, however, as image, can have no effect on Reality. Yet, would not transference demand the removal, or better yet, the death, of that other one. That other one that seems to stand in the way of creation achieving its goal of becoming God, of becoming the Reality. So, if that which is and is of creation desires to become God or become Reality, God and/or Reality must be removed. Creation must believe that the transference has been accomplished and God and/or Reality are gone and never existed. Creation must believe that it alone has all that was desired and dreamed about that was God, that was Reality. Creation must believe in its infallibility, its infiniteness, and in its entity.
On the side: Within creation, what if the one desired was a god? Could a god lose identity? What would become of the other one, thee one that was the object of the desire? What would become of that other one, the one that lost its identity? Can transference truly take place if one remains ? Can being desired alter Reality? Would not transference demand the death of that other one? What if that original was a god, could a god lose identity? History would prove that many gods have lost identity. Do we not, daily, come in contact with and hear about gods that have lost their identity? What is a god anyway, but that which is worshipped? When a god is no longer worshipped does that god then exist? Has transference taken place?
In projection, an image of an original or a host is projected onto a surface that seemingly changes the reflecting surface so that it is meant to resemble the original. In transference the reflecting surface becomes the original. The reflecting surface is that one desiring to become other than it is. Example: A desires to become B through a transference of B's persona or B's essence onto A. Through transference, the image is seen to change places with the desired object. Ideally, if the transference went as planned, the one that desires would see itself as the Reality, but in the case of becoming God or becoming the Reality the one that desires becomes a distorted and inverted image . Actually, the opposite effect is all that is achieved. That which has now become image sees itself as having transferred and takes on the new role. It is, however, only role playing. The transference never took place. At least not as planned and hoped for.
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