![]() ![]() If Izumi was able to have a whole life with Itachi and "dying old", Madara must have been capable of putting someone in a dream where they exist and continue their life through their imaginary descendants for generations and generations, for centuries and millions of years which represents few seconds in real life. Alone, but keeping safe humanity inside his dream.Īnd as odditiesinnaruto said, time in a dream can be infinite. If his plan would have succeeded he would have been a type of Vishnu protecting the new world. ![]() Madara’s Brahma phase can be paralleled with him being the second Sage Rikudou and having access to all the chakra on Earth and opening his third eye which represents in hinduism and buddhism the invisible one who brings mystical illumination and visions in the realm of high consciousness. He was preparing the dissolution of the world by perverting the shinobi system and hastening the apparition of the true "Shiva". Obito in creating the Akatsuki and collecting the Bijuus, was incarnating one of Shiva's steps. From his perspective it's a failed world, or should I say a dream who turned into a nightmare, created by another god Hagoromo and perpetuated by his spiritual heirs Hashirama/Naruto. We first met him during the apex of the 4th shinobi war, impersonating in a way Shiva, he destroyed the current shinobi world. Madara's plan is a way to attain this godhood state, to annihilate the world and recreate it again. Shiva Nataraja, Lord of dance and destruction It's a doomsdays to end a cycle and allow a new one to be born. Shiva Nataraja destroys the cosmos, each steps is creating movement in the dissolution of the universe. Shiva the destroyer (in order to recreate a new world) and note that Shiva is also associated as the Lord of dance.He manifests himself in a sort of trinity: In hinduism there is this idea that the material world is but a creative dream from the imagination of a god. There is between both religions cultural bridges that we can't really see in the West shaped in judeo-christian background but from an asian/japanese audience it's implicit. If everything had gone according to his plan, he would be just there alone watching people slowly dying in their cocoons.Īctually, I’ve realized recently that from my western perspective, I didn't pay attention to the Buddhist cultural aspect and in some instances the hindu cosmology. If you think about it, he was not supposed to be part of this collective dream that could have longed an eternity from the perception of those inside the dream. He was not interested anymore about his own desires. It seems that Izuna's death but more precisely the valley of the end’s defeat marked for him a definitive rupture with "this world". It's interesting that Madara never wished to resurrect his loved ones contrary to Obito. It's a thought I had following this post here ![]()
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