
Worldviews have to change over the course of our life. We cannot see how we have always seen, and certainly not how our ancestors have have seen, and not even as the people we spend most of our time with see, and expect to be able to see what we are looking at and comprehend what it means and know what is called for and do what needs to be done in response here/now from one situation to the next all our life long. We have to develop our ability to see our seeing early on, and to ask the right questions in response: How do I know that the way I see is the way to see? How many different ways of seeing are there? How does the way I see keep me from seeing? What makes me think that the way I say things are is the way things are? How often have I changed my mind about what is important? How often have the people around me changed their mind about anything? Who are the people I/We disagree with most vehemently? What can they show me about what I am not seeing? What would happen if I adopted as a basic principle, "All people are entitled to their own point of view"? And began to exemplify it by talking to other people about how they see things? And why that way and not some other way instead? And probing/exploring how some way they see clashes with other ways they see-- and do the same thing with me and the way I see? And allowing one question to lead to another all my life long no matter where it takes me or what it means for the way I live my life?
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I am going to have cataract surgery on my right eye tomorrow, and that may impact my writing schedule, which may mean that I write later tomorrow, or, maybe not at all. My absence should be only one day at the most, and then again in two weeks when we go for my left eye. In the meantime, fare well, question everything, “see” you soon, and better than ever!
Be at ease about such surgery. It has come to me and many of my friends and family. It’s over before you realize it and then you’re out and home (or to your favorite breakfast place, as I remember 😉).
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Thanks, Sandy! And, may it be always and forever so!
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Not there yet, but my mother said years ago that the event and results were wonderful. You will do great/greatly.
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