The Temporal Hero


The Mundane Hero does not whine and complain, because the under-conscious activity in his brain that produces what is seen to be his “individual personality,” makes him behave in such a way. The unseen Man-Of-Comprehension does not do so, simply because it no longer occurs to him.  This is based on his past extraordinary experiences of plainly seeing what is going on in life, without the filtration of the usual brain activity that constitutes man’s ordinary mental conception.


Another feature of the Temporal-Hero is that he does not brag.  He is not, in fact, given to talk about himself at all; true again from Indian metaphorical war lore of 4000 B.C. to Italian spaghetti westerns, circa l960.


Caesar does not trumpet his own triumphs, nor Solomon say, “Hey, am I smart or what?” To the Mundane-Hero is attributed the quality called, “humility,” while the operational reality that supports this mental concept is simply a natural, un-thought-about aspect of a Comprehending-Man’s being. 


When you know what is going on in life, it never crosses your so-called mind to say words about yourself and your so-called, maybe-accomplishments.  Doing so would be a complete, inconceivable denial of everything that a man-who-knows – KNOWS.
 
 

The Secular-Hero is unquestionably honest, and forthright; he certainly would not steal from you, nor engage in any form of duplicity.  Even if he is smarter than others, he does not “put them on,” or make them look foolish, any more than Samson would physically take on 90 pound weaklings in arm wrestling, in some sort of attempt to make himself “look good.”

J.

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