(Segment 3)
Foreword;
Heights exceptional are being traversed. Attain for yourself, an adequate height. Let this height be measured by the nerves that build in your frontal lobe. Notice: these nerves exist only in the frontal lobe; they cannot leap out of the nearest bush and physically push you down from your newly attained height. While this realisation functions only as rational ammunition in the world of the irrational cerebellum, perhaps some level of comfort can be attained by its use. For those a-familiar with height gain, make use of local stove tops, ladders, bicycle seats, mountain ridges, and protruding structures to get up there.
Middleword;
Once your height has been attained, begin to traverse. This may need more instruction – for to traverse a height that prompts within the traverser an anxiety of death, is not easy. Tremendous efforts have been made to ensure that humans stay away from these heights, it simply isn’t beneficial to the reproduction, and thus the continuation, of the species. But perhaps it is exactly because of this that we must traverse. When you traverse, your movement shall be lateral, a good and healthy side-to-side swaying is encouraged. Change of perspective is the fundamental goal achieved by your traversing, an act performed on height. Some argue that it is purely the act of gaining an uncomfortable elevation that provokes the blood flow in a meaningful way, but this is not the case. When you become severely uncomfortable, you might simply close your eyes and attempt to disconnect from your situation. The act of moving – the traverse – while you are on your pedestal means that this disconnection is no longer feasible. You must engage with your height, and you must feel uncomfortable.
Endword;
Why would you choose to indulge in this endeavour if the principal gain is the feeling of discomfort? This question answers itself once we realise the importance of discomfort. Shift, drift, remain – rapid eye movement – we all require discomfort to stop the slow creep of staleness. By living perpetually referential lives, we must always seek experiences on both ends of the spectrum so that the spectrum does not shorten. For in time any spectrum, no matter how long, will eventually shrink to a speck if the only engagement it nets out lies on a single solitary spot.
The Chimpanzee has abused the orgasm button, now it is perpetually numb. Chasing an unattainable high when it really should have been traversing an uncomfortable height.