More can be found in art than meets the eye/I.
Continuing with the golf related theme of my previous post: I’m a bas relief sculptor, and when I was working with Seagull pewter here in Canada many years ago, I designed a golfer frame. As I was designing the golfers hat (floppy... old traditional style golfers cap), I noticed that it looked like a naked sleeping woman who was curled up so her back, a portion of her right arm, and bum was visible, and so I accentuated the look that much more, butt still hidden. When the design was passed by my boss and others, I pointed out the naked lady. Needless to say they made me change it... butt if you look close enough you can see a bare residual.
So “high” on the golfers head was a naked sleeping woman. And then if you consider the hidden brain that people see in Michelangelo’s painting above, inside the brain is God, butt do note the protective arm around what appears to be a naked woman... AWAKE!!
It occurred to me that “Hi” and “High” are homophones as well. So why would the inner twin world want to make this connection. First of all, saying “hi” is an informal greeting for “hello”, and indeed this blog is a way for the inner twin world to say “hi”. I didn’t think of it any more, butt followed another seemingly unrelated thought— secret images found in the art of famous artists (here). The site reveals about 10, butt one stood out (see at bottom of post)— the Michelangelo painting, “Creation of Adam”. It involves the brain!! And this stands out because just a few moments before, I was on Quora in the midst of a heated debate with individuals (one in particular) about the brain. This was my Quora question:
Why is it that Geneticists haven’t explored the possibility of an absorbed twin brain, given the recent discovery of Chimera humans and that some have absorbed complete functioning organs of their twin.
So, a “Brain Theme” pattern cluster in the works. And come to think of it, there’s another connection to “high”— the ceiling like the brain is seated on high... the roof is like the skull, and the ceiling ... and the painting represents the brain. It very well may be that Michelangelo wasn’t aware of the brain in his painting, butt his inner twin was!!
The brain is the most important organ, making us who we are... it is the “highest” form of our being, and literally, because we stand erect, it rests on high... within the crown of our head—the “highest”part of our body!! The inner twin world are pointing to where they are.
Note from the “Creation of Adam” paintings wiki page:
In 1990 in Anderson, Indiana, physician Frank Meshberger noted in the Journal of the American Medical Association that the background figures and shapes portrayed behind the figure of God appeared to be an anatomically accurate picture of the human brain.[15] On close examination, borders in the painting correlate with major sulci of the cerebrum in the inner and outer surface of the brain, the brain stem, the frontal lobe, the basilar artery, the pituitary gland and the optic chiasm.
Frank Meshberger doesn’t have a wikipedia page, butt I did find his obituary:
Dr. Frank Lynn Meshberger of Indianapolis died on June 13, 2020 at the age of 73.
He died on my birthday!!!!!!
Note as well, this blogs information sidebar that also mentions the brain, and in particular, two notable persons mentioned on the thalamus Wikipedia page— Wilhelm His and Sergei Korsakoff, both who passed away on May 1. The sidebar also explains the cryptic meaning behind the date. So let’s take the time to investigate the Human Brain Wikipedia page, and because it’s lengthy, let’s narrow our search to notable persons mentioned in the Modern Period section. After investigating the Wikipedia pages of the 17 people mentioned, two stood out:
- Santiago Cajal (May 1, 1852–October 17,1934)
- Paul MacLean (May 1, 1913–December 26, 2007)
______________________________
The shape of the red cloak surrounding God is an astoundingly anatomically correct rendering of the human brain. Does this mean that Michelangelo believed that God was the creation of the human brain? That will never be known, but could be an interesting look into the brain of one of the most iconic artists in history.
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