At some point in our lives we will discover the dualism that arises between our inner person and the distorted union that has arisen with the original function of our inner father figure and the experiences we have had of it in our lives. The tension and energy expressed in their relationship causes the person within us to be called to develop as it is formulated and matures and the right psychic attention between them arises. If it is completely unconscious, then it causes us to try to be the reworking of that relationship that we have within ourselves also for others everywhere in all our relationships around us. Or just continue to be the infantile conditional and unchanging relationships that have existed between us and others since our childhood. We become unattainable for individual and genuine human consideration and annoyingly arrogant in a way that constantly diminishes others in themselves around us. We will have difficulty with quiet listening human to human relationships. Which with the right attention makes us walk the inner path we must follow and formulate for ourselves, with the help of our inner father figure in his role as a cultural mediator of the insight and wisdom that our inner source conveys to him through our inner person. For it is our conscious relationship to our inner person that makes us observe and convey what is within us in an interpersonal cultural sense. If we are completely ignorant of this relationship within ourselves, we instead begin to stage it with others. But then with the frustration that arises when we force our inner relationship, the settlement that we renegotiate between those within us onto others. Usually under the protection of self-absorbed ideological claims, a misdirected and misguided power of action that is based in the patterns of virtue that our conditioning provides us with. In any case, we live out the relationship between them within us in a way that makes us insensitive to others outside this staging of our psychic life and what we must face and go through there on the path to our inner maturity’s meditative independence from others, in their self-reflective relationship to themselves. In this way, we both reformulate and negotiate the compromise that our childhood conditioning has made us reconcile ourselves to so that our inner person can process that within himself that he reflects outwardly and that has its origin in the psychic sphere of reality we carry within us. But without first having found our absolute stillness, our inner mental balance in the space we have within ourselves, and the peace and quiet that allows us to begin to listen to what the source within us wants us to hear, it is not possible. We will just constantly act as if we were that father figure in front of others and try to stage it for them. Many will submit to this and find themselves performing that role for others’ perception of their own importance, because not everyone is willing or able to perceive and face this within themselves. We do it at the cost of our personal freedom and inner independence, and we pay for it with the contents of our soul. That which we in different forms call inspiration. Or life within our life.