That is good I guess because I don't think any of the rest of us have a clue as to what you have been saying here.
Generally it is saying that what we see with our eyeballs is not reality. It suggests there are abstract layers that conceal reality, and it wonders when or where, at what level, these abstract layers wandered away, or drifted away from reality. It suggest that the search for reality is challenging, and that so far, the abstract layers are like "turtles all the way down", meaning, it's difficult to establish the actual foundation of these layers of abstraction away from reality. For example, first it was Newtonian math, then Einsteinian math, but now there is a new paradigm that is dooming the space-time theories of Einstein.
They do not say that reality and Christ are the same thing, but i do.
If this is true, then it is also true what i have said that if you can see what faith has produced (these abstract layers which conceal reality), then you can't see Christ, and visa versa, if you can see Christ (reality), you cannot see these abstract layers that conceal reality (Christ). It also means that the body (flesh) is not an aspect of Christ, and serves rather to conceal Christ, the body being an abstract layer of what i call the faith-flesh complex, which opposes what i'm calling the knowledge-spirit complex.
This is the basic, ancient, primordial "enmity" alluded to in the bible. You are simply not able to admit that you are squarely in the faith-flesh camp, still trying, after millions of years of time, to validate the apparent existence of it's product (the material worlds), and prove that it has been blessed ("...it is good") by reality (Christ). It has not been blessed, and won't be, because it is not Christ's will. The faith-flesh complex is a wish that, by it's nature, goes against the spirit of Christ. Biblical evidence that the body is not an aspect of Christ, is the saying, "There is neither man nor woman in Christ".
They do not say that the abstract layers are products of faith, but i do, and as i've pointed out, the bible also admits that the material world is faith-based (see anonymous letter to "Hebrews").