A solid structure was all I saw, as I walk this path and approached this wall.
I stopped but to stop was in error. This wall should serve as no barrier.
As I look closer, my eyes focus deeper. . .An obstacle this was not.
At first, blinded by its solidity, now layers I can see.
Standing here I am no longer unsure. I embrace this moment's details.
I will proceed and when I look at things moving forward, I will not see barriers, I will appreciate their layers.
Depth is often overlooked. We see what we are faced with and bypass their truest features.
Why would we explore when the big picture is clear enough? Yet we've dismissed its beauty ... the familiarity that caught our attention in the first place, the smaller pieces that create the whole, the beauty within the core.
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As we look deeper, we decide what the mind will process; but we must be cautious.
The eye is not all that sees. Our eyes grasp what is in front of us ... our minds do the investigating. But when the eyes activate the mind, we cannot reverse.
While the eyes and mind are so closely connected, we must thoughtfully choose what we allow our minds to see.
Imagine looking at a flower bush ... we may see the whole and walk along and forget we ever saw it. We may see the lively flowers, or the dying ones, or we may get closer and admire a single flower.
The closer our eyes look, the deeper our mind absorbs, the better our conscious understands, the more mindful our actions are.
By balancing a moment's entirety, we process its harmony. Disconnection arises when feelings no longer exist; when harmony is no longer perceived.
It is a personal fault to suppress a moment. When it doesn't feel right, it is not necessarily change that is needed but our perception that needs change. When we balance perception, we find harmony.
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