Repudiating the excessive sexualism of Freud and insisting upon the importance of the food-seeking impulse, especially in childhood, he regards all the primary impulses as differentiations of one fundamental energy, the life force which sustains all our strivings, both conscious and unconscious […]
Japanese is traditionally written downwards (tategaki) and you begin reading from the top right of a page. This means that books are opened from what we would consider to be the back. Nowadays, however, books, newspapers and magazines are often written western style, in horizontal lines (yokogaki) from left to right and, in these cases, the book is opened from our (western) understanding of the front.
… and not so much as an escape either, but rather as an acceptance of their shorn lot and curse, and as a movement towards a tribunal, where no trees or other life existed and where they would be forced to contemplate the stark searing stare and voice of Almighty God all day and all night, pounding out their flintless existence upon rocks, into huddlesome shelter, and cupping the occasional drops of rain in their hands as a glorious nectar given them by Almighty God, yea though that water be only their tears, forever and ever, until death them do part, or until a sign of blinding light lifted their cataracts.
By her woman I sent your message.