Monday, February 14, 2011

Beyond that stereoscopic vision.

In the name of The Omniscient.

Folks, stare into this screen, or simply blankly into thin air, just for a moment, and answer me. Not by words, but by recalling the days that have passed. 

Have you ever seen the world differently?
Have you ever tried looking upon everything around you from a perspective of your own, uniquely yours, a point of view different from others', seeing things more than just the eyes can see, that your perception alone is able to change even the worst, darkest things into the colours of a rainbow and beyond. Have you? When was the last time you ever did and what was it that you saw through that eyepiece of yours?

Seeing the world differently; you can change yourself. Seeing yourself differently; you can change the rest. And simply by looking harder; you can change the world. Unfortunately, most of the time we're too uninvolved with ourselves that we tend to conform to the point of view of the society or community and that's when acculturation tints the big picture into a huge mirror that everytime we try to analyse the picture, all we see is our own reflection as everyone sees it. Rarely anyone realize it's all there, only if we try harder, and if only we're brave enough to just take off those ready-made, plastic lenses and look through our very own eyes, turning whatever we see into whatever we want it to be or how we want it to work. I learnt that experiences and situations are neutral, our surrounding, however, is mixed up with all sorts of emotions that have been put into every other situation to make up the present environment we deal with each day. A joke being told is neutral, it's us who decide to put a quality to it that makes it funny. We decide it's funny, so we laugh. We're making every little thing so complex as we go on and infuse intricacies in the simplest things that we come to a point where we blame these things instead when they eventually become a burden on our shoulders. We wrapped them with layers that over time, we tend to even forget what was underneath in the first place. You see, the greatest things are seen not when you coat something ordinary with silver paint, but they are seen when you see the most ordinary things beyond the ordinary surface.


 It's about seeing it as a great thing to make it great.
It's about seeing one as special to make one special.
So what do you see?

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