I'm not sure how to respond to this because, while you are free to believe what you want, a large portion of this is clearly contrary to Schopenhauer on any plausible reading of the text, so it becomes difficult to discuss if we're talking about his views and not ours.
Yes, objects need subjects and subjects need objects- Will "needs" representation, representation "needs" Will. — schopenhauer1
This seems to imply that the will is a 'subject' and the representation an 'object.' But this is wrong, subject and object are both contained in representation, and will is neither. Yes, the subject and object are co-essential. But neither is essential to the will.
Will does not come "prior" to Representation. — schopenhauer1
It does, in the sense that there is plenty of will without representation (the latter only exists in highly developed organisms), but not vice-versa.
There is no time before time where Will is doing this or that such that time and space are created at sub time x. — schopenhauer1
Yes, but this is not because representation is somehow essential to the will or has been propping it up for eternity, but rather because the will is timeless.
Just as the Will is eternal, so too is the primitive organism, as again the first organism was NOT created at any one point in time, since there was no time before it existed. — schopenhauer1
This is just wrong, though, both commonsensically and from what Schop. says. Obviously the organism did arise at some point in time, the world of presentation attests to this, and Schop. frequently speaks this way.
Time only functions when the organism is around, but so long as it does, it always retrojects backward to a time before that organism existed. You are confusing things and talking about time as if it were part of the thing in-itself. If you want to talk about time, you can only talk about it via representation, and in representation, time presents itself as preceding the life of the organism, always. And this suffices for the empirical reality of the fact that there was a time before the organism.
You are asserting that I did not mean that it exists in a timeless present. If I did say that, then I will just agree to the language of timeless present. Again, this is the oddity that I find not convincing- the ever present organism. — schopenhauer1
A timeless presence is not the same as ever-presence, as if this means the organism is very old or has been there since the beginning. It's just that the subject, as the one that projects time, is itself not temporal.
As for your idea of "veils used to objectify Will", you make it seem like there is a second party hiding the Will. It is all Will, but it is just another aspect of Will. What I think Schop emphasized most was that Will is the hidden aspect that may give us an understanding of what is behind the scenes of the phenomenal. The idea that the phenomenal is actually an illusion only makes sense in the context of the idea that humans may not realize the inner aspect, and take the phenomenal for all there is. — schopenhauer1
The language of veils is his, not mine.