>>93370922I think it's important that Lia doesn't exist. What is brought forth to us as Lia is something greater than reality and is structured as such so that we might be able to see through the limiting haze of this existence.
Lia is to be appreciated but that appreciation should not be to fall forevermore into the depth of Lia but instead renew the succor one might obtain from the aspects of existence that Lia naturally reinvigorates in the viewer.
>“We have a right to our labor, but not to the fruits of our labor.”