Soul Game By Adeline Atlas (SOS: School Of Soul)

Dec 13, 2025

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How Do We Come To Be Animated?

 

Through our breath, otherwise known as wind.The wind of your Soul, through which you breathe your reality.

 

breather (noun)

  1. 1600, "a living creature, one who breathes," agent noun from breath. The meaning "spell of exercise to stimulate breathing" is from 1836. 4

 

breathe (verb)

"To draw air into and expel it from the lungs; to inhale and exhale (a scent, etc.).”

 

The breath, a seemingly simple act, is far more profound than its physical manifestation. It is through this act of breathing that the Soul brings in not just air but Spirit. This Spirit is the essence of life, the unseen yet powerful force that animates us. It is a bridge connecting our physical existence with the intangible realm of our aspirations and inspirations. The breath we draw is not merely a mixture of gases; it is imbued with the Spirit, infusing us with vitality and connecting our innermost desires and inspirations with our physical form.

Inspiration and Aspiration are pivotal in this context. Inspiration, derived from 'inspirare,' means to breathe in, signifying the divine or external force that breathes life and ideas into us. Aspiration, from 'aspirare,' means to breathe towards, reflecting our inner desires and goals. These concepts together illustrate the dynamic energy running through the body, making us feel most alive.

When the Soul is present, it is full of inspiration and aspiration, both the demonstration of forward-moving and growing energy running through the body. The presence of inspiration and aspiration is how one feels when they are most alive! A state of bursting with new ideas and the energy to conduct the plans.

 

aspire (verb)

Derived from Latin, captures the essence of "breathing towards" a goal or desire.5 Aspire "strive for, seek eagerly to attain, long to reach," c. 1400.6 Aspire to inspire; breathe, breathe on" (12c.), from Latin aspirare in transferred senses, "to be favorable to, assist; to climb up to, to endeavor to obtain, to reach to, to seek to reach. 7

 

infuse (verb)

From ad "to" (see ad-) + spirare "to breathe." The notion is of "panting with desire,” The literal sense of "breathe, exhale."8

 

wind as a life force (noun)

The term “windpipe” itself derives from its function as the conduit for air (or “wind”) to and from the lungs.

 

Our lungs are our storage container for our life force, symbolized by wind. Second wind? Ever wonder why we say, "She had a second wind" or "he had the wind knocked out of him?" It’s when you get that second burst of life force.

Wind = Life Force 

Breathe = Wind

 

breather (noun)

The term "breather" originates from the 1600s, describing a living creature, an entity that breathes. The act of breathing, or "to breathe," implies drawing air into and expelling it from the lungs. This process of inhalation, dating back to the 1620s, represents a "breathing in" activity.

inhalation (noun)

In the 1620s, "a breathing in" noun of action from past participle stem of Latin inhalare "breathe upon" (used here as if it meant "to breathe in"), from in- "on, upon" (from PIE root *en "in") + halare "breathe."9

 

Who is the inhalant? ‘Something’ must be the inhalant . . . for it is an action. Who is taking the action? Think about this for a minute, who is doing the breathing?

You do not schedule in to remember to breathe every day as you would to drink enough water. You never have to ‘remember’’ to breathe. It just happens - yet it is an action, so who is taking the action?

If the body can remain without its breath the Soul, the person as they were previously known, is not present. The true inhalant is the Soul, not the body. For when they go they go together. No different than the senses, when the senses go, the Soul is gone, but the body can remain here or be assisted to keep living on even when a person as we knew them is gone. If that is done, the body is not inhabited by a Soul to experience the senses.

 

inhalant (adjective)

1804, from Latin inhalantem, present participle of inhalare (see inhale).10

However, life is a cycle. Every living entity reaches its point of expiration. Our final exhale, our "expiry," marks the culmination of our life's journey. Once the Soul has left, it takes its last breath, its last inhale of connection to source energy. Without breath, there isn’t a Soul that has exhaled its last time, resulting in expiration. Our expiry is our last breath.

 

expiry (noun)

“Close, termination," 1752, from expire + -y (4). Meaning "dying, death" is from 1790.11

 

expiration (noun) expire (verb)

c. 1400, "to die," from Old French expirer "expire, elapse" (12c.), from Latin expirare/exspirare "breathe out, blow out.”12

 

exhale (noun)

To breathe (one's) last "die" is from the 1590s." hence, figuratively, "expire, come to an end, cease," from ex "out" (see ex-).13

spirare (noun)

“To breathe" (see Spirit (n.)14

 

None of the Soul’s electrical current or operating system belong to or are tied to the physical body. This is the reason why, in a severe accident, a body can momentarily maintain while a Soul can be declared brain dead. The body is still with us here, yet something has left. That something is your Soul, which can be separated from your body.

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