Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Authentic Self



For every day in the valley, there will be way more mountaintop experiences, picture-perfect highs, and cinematic nights.

Even the harshest feelings will peak and crash, and even the most dramatic catastrophes will fade over time. You will not remember the hours you spent crying or walking off your emotions. What you will remember is what you learned. What you will remember is what you saw. What you will remember is gratitude.

For everything we cannot control in life, there is so much more we can. We do not need to correct every single setback. We do not need to avoid the hard days altogether.
Sometimes the best way to clear muddy water is to just leave it alone.

To succeed, we must fail. To be beautiful, we must embrace our uniqueness and see ourselves as enough. To learn, we must try. To be better, we must brave our inner storms. We are not meant to heal ourselves to the point of perfection. We are meant to be human, and when we allow ourselves to live authentically, our lives will help us heal.



KJ

Monday, February 10, 2020

Perception...



Perception is a very tricky topic.

If we are talking about the material world (physical realm) I believe that the reality of a situation is based upon the correspondence view of what is true (real).

Metaphysically speaking, as I suppose we should be engaged in doing within this forum, perceptions could be described as, “what is there?” and “what is it like?”

This topic could encompass volumes of writing, but within this forum there is a need to be brief.

I have used the following many times to illustrate how perceptions can differ, but reality is static. If I say, “The grass is green,” I have offered my perception of what I believe the grass to look like. That perception is based on light emanating from the sun (or some artificial source), reflecting of off the grass, enters through the cornea, passes through the lens which bends the light, which then passes through the vitreous gel, and then is focused on the surface of the retina which contains the rods and cones. From there it travels via electrical impulses to the brain through the optical nerve. Is my perception accurate?

That depends on several factors. Is the pathway the light travels through my eye healthy and “normal?” Does my brain process the electrical impulse correctly? Do I have the cognitive ability to decode the information? Finally, is the grass, in fact, green? If the grass is green, and I am healthy and/or at least functioning correctly, I am accurate in my assessment. At that point, the grass being green makes the content of my perception true.

However, is it a true statement to say, “The grass is green,” if I am blind? Not only is it an accurate statement, it would an accurate perception even if I did not believe it to be true. It is reality that makes our perceptions true or false. I posit that it is through evidence that we determine if our perceptions are in tune with reality.

KJ