‘The physical tests the hero must encounter have ended, but his most difficult one still remains. Even the bravest voyagers who have conquered the gods themselves can fail it, for in the very moment of their accomplishment many have given birth within themselves to an impatience with established morality, and even the rule of law itself. For a voice inside their mind is already whispering that with their new found fame and the power it has brought, how much easier life would be to be rid of all the constraints such standards imply. Little does our hero understand that this is his own sinister side whispering to him, as it has whispered to so many heroes before him, urging him that his glory can be the greater if he will put aside the well-being of the collective he is part of, in favor of his own self-glorification. To be of any further use to the world such tainted heroes must experience decontamination, a public submission of self to the humanity they can yet serve. So they must change again, just as they did to enter this unique world, or are doomed to eternally be part of it. For the rite of passage into the world that permitted them their new found fame is matched by a rite of escape, and there is no departure from it till they have cleansed themselves of the stench of their own conceit. To do so they must finally confront that sinister side, and ensure nothing of its ways has corrupted them, and could be carried back to endanger the world from which they first came. Thus each hero must make a choice, and by his making of it clarify to all around him that he has learned the final truth the unique world holds for him – whether it is better to be Julius Caesar craving the adulation of his legions, that through their sacrifice he may attain even greater fame, or be Jesus Christ, willing to suffer any personal indignity, that the legions he commands may see peace on earth.’