Shifting perceptions
We are many. We are one. We are individuals set in a sea of collectivity. Everything we do affects something or someone else in the world.
And yet we never remember that.
We remember that we are lonely. We remember we are in pain. We remember that we have to make our own way, and that in the end we die alone.
This division, this polarity, could be that which causes us to seek meaning in the midst of our confusion.
At least for me.
But something is beginning to shift. And I start to understand that both those places of connectivity and of aloneness exist at exactly the same time. I can be in one or the other, and both, (and undoubtedly there are many more) depending on the choices that I make and how I choose to interpret the present moment.
In the movie “What the Bleep do We Know” and again in Gregg Braden’s “The Divine Matrix” a theory is posited that if protons of light can actually bilocate, be in two places at once, then so can we. Quite honestly, I don’t see how. Not physically anyway.
But what is starting to formulate in my mind is the idea that it is through our perception that we can experience different realities by creating different reactions to the same experience. We can feel hurt by other’s treatment of us, and we can understand that they are hurting. We can learn about ourselves through our interaction with others and we can judge them wanting.
Ironically, as we hold these many realities, we become one thing – more peaceful.