When asleep, the brain creates experiences so engrossing that we momentarily forget we are in our bed. Upon waking, it continues this enchantment, moulding our perception of being an individual bound by time and space despite being nothing but the formlessness of oneness. That is the brain’s empathetic response to our desire for more than one.

From Duality Hack #12.2 in Alexius’ Duality Hacks.
What and where you appear is the brain
Since oneness is shapeless and, therefore, without beginning and end, there is nothing other than the formlessness of oneness. However, metaphorically, you ask the brain to create experiences of a world with more than one. The brain, in its desire to please, constructs experiences from nothing as if you leave oneness with more than one, forming the illusion of being in a world of multiplicities.
You escaped oneness in a big bang coming out of a black hole. But you cannot leave oneness as it is formless and thus endless. Ergo, any appearance is an illusion.
However, since the brain cannot manifest its fantasy of more than one, it remains in the brain – like what and where you appear in a dream is in your headspace. So, since you are AloneTogether with a fiction of more than one, you do not return to oneness as one but AloneTogether with the fictional parts you hold dear, such as a friend, spouse or pet. In other words, you return precisely as you imagined to leave oneness: AloneTogether with more than one.
The brain has made a fantasy world with more than one, per your instructions. So, you need the brain to undo the fantasy.

The brain is your best friend
Jesus embodies a paradox in his solitude on the cross. His aloneness is a necessary step towards oneness, as there is no room for more than one. But returning to oneness also requires being together, for to be an individual among others implies a departure from oneness as more than one.
So, you return AloneTogether by not excluding but including others, for example, by excusing them, like when Jesus said, »They know not what they do.« It does not mean you must believe in Jesus. He is not the way. You being Alone together is the key to that which is One.


Separated from others, you are alone, but AloneTogether you are with everyone
Jesus must have been as alone as can be on the cross. However, that is necessary for returning to oneness because it has not room for more than one. Nevertheless, returning also requires being together because to be someone amongst others, you imagine departing oneness as more than one. Therefore, you return AloneTogether by not excluding but including others, for example, by excusing them, like when Jesus said, »They know not what they do.« It does not mean you must believe in Jesus. He is not the way. You being Alone together is the key to that which is One.

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