I really enjoyed contemplating this subject, and thank you guys for the wonderful links.
I am assuming that in the images presented the small guys are humans and the tall guys are gods, this is the key I used to try and make sense of things. If that is the case then the gods interact with us in a beneficial manner. If the tall guys are not gods then they could well be aliens and again the aliens seem to be acting in a helpful manner with the humans.
Beneficial
The bulb type object could be a device of sorts and the serpent the filament, it could also represent a field of some sort which is powered by the serpent energy called Kundalini. If the djed does represent the spinal column then it could well be Kundalini. As we evolve, eventually the Kundalini force which lies like a coiled serpent at the base of our spinal column, is raised to the crown (via a winding path) and cosmic consciousness (the All Seeing Eye) results.
Could this image be demonstrating a raising of consciousness?
The first image, with the head most high, is also surrounded by raised serpents, representing Wisdom. And what about the G&R s…. and the one preceding it?
I have also posted many times before that the spinal column is made up of 33 bones. The base bones are called the sacrum and is triangular. All coincidental maybe.
Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting…trailing clouds of glory do we come from God, who is our home -Wordsworth
but there r 4 pillars.. i think i saw them linked to heaven as beings its support..
That rather sounds like the Chinese/Hindu legend of an elephant supporting the universe while standing on the back of a tortoise.
In the case of Egypt the 2 pillars are semi-historical, being involved in the separated kingdoms of the north and south. Any technical functions of the pillars are obscure but arguably the pillars continued to be represented in traditional cultures until recent times
The Egyptians called them Tat Pillars. They are, however, better known throughout the world as Totem Pillars.
The Egyptians called one pillar "Tat" which in their language means "in strength." The other pillar they called "Tattu" which means "to establish," and when conjoined, "In strength this place is established for ever." The Egyptians considered the figure of a Tat an emblem of strength and stability.
It will be noticed that all of the pillars in this group carry four horizontal bars, in this way symbolizing the Four Great Primary Forces, or, as they were more wont to call them:--"The Four Great Gods."
The entrance to Amenti taken from the papyrus Anana, one of the most beautiful papyri I have ever seen. In Egyptian mythology, two Tats form the entrance to Tattu. Tattu is the gateway to the region where the mortal soul is blended with an immortal spirit and "established in the mysteries of Amenti for ever."
I have seen those descriptions earlier of the Tat pillars. It seems to me that the descriptions refer to the functions of the pillars - as if the gods used them for technical purposes to consolidate their rule.
In the following image there is a pharaoh (small figure) attending to the pillar and a tall god bringing what might be components or raw inputs (fuel?) to the pillar