The little known way to see true and world in record time.
True and world are words.
This is hard to believe, and even harder to accept.
I should know for it took me 23,000 days before I believed, and finally accepted it myself, in 2016: Everything you see, everything you have a word for, and everything you know, is word.
Like every other child, you know from personal experience that you’ve arrived in this world wordless, without words. Only after your physical birth did you decide to morph into a word-user, an animal with words. It took you like everybody else, 12 to 18 months to learn words, but that’s what it took, the price to pay (average).
Once the price paid, words sit on your nose, as it were, as glasses, and everything you look at, you see through them.
It’s not just about you. We’re all in this together, you, me, and the other 9 billion word-users like you and me, getting more by the day.
World and true are no exceptions.
We see the world as either inexistent, flat, round, small, or whatever next, and true in different shapes and sizes, depending on when and where we’re born:
You might find it difficult to see world and true not through words, especially in the beginning. But I can assure you there’s a way:
To see, forget the word of what you’re looking at.
I discovered this as mentioned above, back in 2016. Since then I learned there’s a difference between knowing the word of something and knowing something. You can know the word of anything in all the words of the world, but when you’re finished, you’ll know absolutely nothing whatever about it. So, let’s look at, for example a bird or a tree, and see what it’s doing. That’s the only thing that matters.
“When you see a difference between the guidebook and the bird, believe the bird.” – Tara Brach
TAKEAWAY
To see again, forget the word of what you’re looking at.
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After having read the above, I got mixed up in my head!!! When I see a tree, I look at it, at its beauty, size, colour, and enjoy looking at it. I don’t even think to name it. So…. what’s next? Although I know by now that tree is a word. But it is also something beautiful I enjoy looking at…
Marie-Claire, every thought ends with a word – the word you think best co-responds to what you, the responder, will say next. Which means when you’re thinking you’re in fact deciding the word(s) you have decided to say next, in self-talk or aloud makes no difference, just as calling words a dream makes no difference. In other words, whether you’re looking, seeing, or dreaming makes no difference either since words sit on your nose, as if were, as glasses. Less mixed up in your head? I hope so because that’s the intent behind my reply.