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Black Sabbath – A National Acrobat Lyrics 9 years ago
This song is about Universal Consciousness as it appears (or, rather, does not appear) to us humans.

"I am the world that hides the universal
Secret of all time
Destruction of the empty spaces is my
One and only crime"

To us, we in the "world", Consciousness/God is the "universal secret of all time". "Destruction of the empty spaces" is what consciousness does, it illuminates (bring consciousness to) that which was dark/empty/unconscious before.

"I've lived a thousand times
I found out what it means to be believed
The thoughts and images
The unborn child who never was conceived"

"I've lived a thousand times" is just another way of saying I've lived forever, its intimation being that humanity lives past the present life, is reincarnated and lives forever.

"I found out what it means to be believed, The thought and images" means Consciousness/God has been believed by all religions from time immemorial, from the Christian God, the Judaic God, the Hindu God, the religions of South America, the Indian religions, all have a different “conception” of Consciousness/God.

"The unborn child who never was conceived" Consciousness has never been fully captured by any religion, as that is impossible, so it remains "unborn" and "never conceived".

"When little worlds collide
I'm trapped inside my embryonic cell
And flashing memories
Are cast into the never ending well"

"Little worlds" are the small minds of humanity. When they collide, Consciousness/God cannot be born, so remains in its "Embryonic cell", its "flashing memories" of itself "are cast into the never ending well" of infinity to be born somewhere else where little minds are not the norm and give consciousness its vital room to be born and grow.

"The name that scorns the face
The child that never sees the cause of man
The deathly darkness that
Belies the fate of those who never ran"

Continues the ideas of the previous stanza in that the name of Consciousness/God scorns the little worlds/minds/face of man, and will never "see the cause of man". Belie is to run counter to or contradict. “The deathly darkness” is the belief that death is the dark/final end. “Those who never ran” are those who never adopted the beliefs of the human race (they never ran that race). So, deathly darkness is what those who adopt human beliefs believe, but those who “never ran” know differently, in that they know that death is not the end.

“Well I know it’s hard for you to know the reason why
And I know you'll understand when it's time to die
Don't believe the life you have will be the only one
You have to let your body sleep to let your soul live on”

Also, continues the Consciousness/God concept in that Consciousness/God is presently beyond human comprehension, but perhaps humans will understand when they are in the afterlife. And that death is the only way “to let your soul live on”.

“Love has given life to you and now its your concern
Unseen eye of inner life will make your soul return
Still I look but not to touch
The seeds of life are sown
Curtain of the future falls
The secret stays unknown”

Love/Consciousness/God “has given life to you”. Now it is up to you what you do with it. Consciousness/God is the “unseen eye of inner life” that “makes your soul return” to itself. “Still I look but not to touch” reiterates that our life is ours to do with as we wish. “The seeds of life are sown, Curtain of the future falls” again stating that Universal Consciousness/God is but the sower of life, not the liver of the life it sows and that we are responsible to live our own life. “The secret stays unknown” merely says that we still don’t get it, don’t understand (that we are responsible for our own lives, not God/Conscioiusness).

“Just remember love is life
And hate is living death
Treat your life for what it’s worth
And live for every breath
Looking back I've lived and learned
But now I'm wondering
Here I wait and only guess
What this next life will bring”

This stanza is a bit of “Black Sabbath” morality. This stanza is pretty self-evident as to what the writers of National Acrobat believe how human beings should live; the last phrase leaves them (and all of us) guessing “what this next life will bring”.

Not sperm. Not abortion. A well constructed, well conceived, totally missed, heavy metal tour-de-force on Universal Consciousness and humanity’s relationship (or, rather, lack thereof) with It.

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