By Inglewics Lasculum
When one tilts their jaw upward toward the heavens, one is attempting to stare into everythingness and nothingness at the same time. Both are incomprehensible to the mortal mind at some level and we aren't truly capable of pondering them both simultaneously. This causes extraordinary stress on mortal dreaming muscles, and forces a hallucination (that of the sky) in order to to convey the concepts without bringing about madness.
During the "day" we see the encompassing everything, limitless blue with Magnus' eye leaking the light of creatia down to us en masse, the only heavenly representation of change during these "hours" are the ever shifting clouds. At "night" we may see clearly the concepts we know hanging above us as planets and the moons, concepts we long for as the stars which take greater meanings in groups, the endless invisible void that surrounds them is the essence of Oblivion: things we do not understand. Things such as fate, revenge, and destruction, cause us nothing but despair and confusion, and yet very few, if anyone can resist their influence completely. These spheres can not be seen for they are not inherently part of us and will never be understood fully, and yet surround us, and thus we will never be able to escape their influence.