Mentality

CHAPTER 7

GROWTH

Growth is the result of making big things out of little things.

So by the co-operative efforts of numberless menorgs all sorts of vegetable and animal life are produced on earth.

The menorgs increase the size of living things from one scope to another according to sphere and density. The quantity and quality of these living things is graded according to the materials with which they have to work.

The menorgs extract their materials for building purposes from the different densities within their reach.

From these different densities they take particles of light, heat, cold, sound, electricity, mentality and various gases and mould them together as larger workable formations.

They coagulate these particles of lesser density into forms of greater density. They make solid matter by drawing volume into mass.

They make solid trees grow up from the soil and penetrate the lesser density, air. They build these trees to withstand the destroying pressure of the air caused by wind currents.

The menorgs cannot build trees from soil that does not possess the necessary ingredients for such constructive purposes.

One of the necessary densities required for tree building is water.

The menorgs use water-power to make trees grow.

By the power of suction they draw water through their roots that are buried in the soil and by a continuation of suction points they draw this water to the topmost branches and leaves of the tree.

Within these currents of water which flow to every part of the tree the menorgs send their vessels loaded with the various materials needed for tree building.

There is no thing in Space that is separate and distinct from everything else. All physical things are made up of parts.

So a tree is made up of innumerable parts.

A tree is a composition of tiny cells, each of which has the power to draw into itself new building materials and to cast out of itself waste matter.

These cells are knit together into sinews and by their combined power of suction and pressure they give strength to the entire tree.

The pressure of the winds against the tree moves it backward and forward in the air. That puts a strain upon all of its cells which affords them the necessary exercise to create the suction power to draw within themselves the elements required for constructive purposes.

The greater strain against the tree caused by the winds makes necessary a greater number of cells knit closer together within the tree. So sufficient new cells are added to meet such requirements.

Therefore, it is the addition of new cells to the body of any organic formation that causes its growth.

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