ABSINTH OF THE SOUL
ABSINTH OF THE SOUL
We live because we must conduct ourselves on certain ways of conquering our ideals that roll over our purposes as a machine to repeatedly pulsate a course of flow that is designated on a nuclear chemistry that we call a spirit that in the alchemical hour of a transmutation or transformation is extracted of the spirit of the thing that is magnificent and processed to the step of an essence that passes with raw and liquid elements to form something simply attractive used to the good in ceremonial occasion or to the evil in ceremonial occasion that we will think and to warm up to 90º degrees centigrade some elements with alchemical purposes, which has become something substantial to what we seek as the fifth pleasure, the seventh sense and the fifth essence, to formalize us on such alchemical existences of a true alchemy that is combined between the spirit that is transferred in that heat between matters of some liquid formulation or solida to our so dreamed pleasures of doing something different that is valuable as an absinthe about great transformations to the soul step that we call subtle energy. Are the Soul and Spirit really different things? ... Breath also has the idea of spirit or soul, because the spirit gives life, which resembles Genesis 2: 7: God created man from the dust of the earth, and breathed into his nostrils a breath of life, transforming it into a living being.
Perhaps we can versify this history because it would be more comprehensive to show that if the gold powder was created from the spirit as well as the elixir of long life in a substantial liquid for certain purposes of living on a life that we simply call alchemical and certainly we can describe it and to say that in everything and everything it may be an absinthe because if it passed between processes of alchemical transformations to a point where the spirit is combined as an atom that has been processed by the spirit that we call this thing, which is the spirit of something that has carried a heat between elements adsorbed and symbolized by an occasion of time that passed between 90 degrees centigrade that we can substantially say that was transmuted and transformed to a pleasure and liquid heat that we call spirit of the thing that is like an absinthe that in the of life on the forces of nature and on a setback of heat or combustion that would symbolize love and the alchemical hatred in manifestation of the fire that is where it is the flame of the genius called salamander that also are being absorbed by the undines that are geniuses of the water that in all and by all have been fluidized on certain combustions in that were made to die or to live certain alchemical elements on the power of the centrifuge which is an apparatus or machine whose operation makes use of the centrifugal acceleration obtained by rotating a vessel and which serves to separate substances of different densities; centrifuge. And we also call Centripetal Force is the resultant force that pulls the body to the center of the trajectory in a curvilinear or circular motion. Objects moving in uniform rectilinear motion have a constant modulating velocity that in the combustion are absorbed certain raw or solid elements that have been converted into water or have passed and will be transformed into powder that will have passed to the material state forming the gold that is dense becoming the a subtle state in the transmutation of the spirit which is the nuclear chemistry which in alchemy is called or can be combined with certain elements at a given time and time in a combustion and heat of 90 degrees centigrade called the spirit of the thing which is simply the chemistry nuclear that had been transformed from the dense one into gold called raw and subtle matter that had transmuted into liquid called chemistry or alchemical element in its state of grace or reached temperature that is like an absinthe that is transformed into life or raw matter either element or liquid that was substantially transmuted into an alchemical process called soul absinthe.
By: Roberto Barros