Ahaha, that old chestnut, hihi! Man, there were so many little mistakes in there, but I guess editing wasn't too important then.

...but, yeah, I enjoyed it at the time, some good questions. I read through it myself again and I remember the person I had been then and the amount of growth I have experienced since then.
If we take enough time to contemplate carefully about everything as we age, reconsider what we are, figure out true relevancy and so on, do our little spiritual journeys, we experience a great deal of growth with every year that goes by. Humanities ability to invent and organize beyond concerns of symbiosis with the rest of existence has raised a world of illusions around us and declared it the law. We have to dig deeper than that and snap out of the illusion to recognize actual reality in order to stumble across our true self. That self includes all and everything. From that point on we can ponder over the function of divisions until we end up in our current state. This allows us to also better understand elements of the illusions we've created (governments, borders, entertainment, health, religions...) that matter and distinguish them from those that really don't at all.
It always sounded so terribly abstract when someone talks about "thinking practically". What it really means is that everything in its ideal state wants to fulfill a function, serve a purpose in one way or another. If any reasonable function can not be detected on the surface, one simply has to start digging deeper until one hits one that makes sense on a larger scale. And if you keep digging you will find reasons that affect all of us and eventually most probably you will find fundamentals that go for all and everything.
Guess I'm in a writing mood now, sheeesh...
