Sermon of Anu and Padomay

I look out the window and see a green tree, but what I see is not part of Anu, for it is a part of Padomay. For this reason, the tree is red, but Padomay reflects darkness into my eye instead of light. Therefore, I see green in the red tree of Padomay, and it sees red in the green tree of Anu, but when I know this, how can I be red or green?

I have a bag of coins which weighs a pound, but the coin is part of Padomay, rather than Anu. Because of this, the bag weighs a negative pound, but Padomay is built of the absence of mass. Therefore, I hold a pound of the weightless coins from Padomay, and it holds a negative pound of Anu’s heavy coins, but if I know this, how can any coin have worth?

To Anu, we are a wheel in a sea of nothing. To Padomay, they are a sea with a wheel of nothing in the center. But while we are existence, Padomay is a lack thereof. Therefore Anu is a wheel and a sea, and so is Padomay, neither combined nor separate, for infinity.

But in this state, what am I?

I am, and I are all we, and we is it.