Analyzing the Things we See

Everywhere around us things are constantly happening. While you want to stay in place, the world keeps moving. Everything keeps changing. I am an ant in a large room, a single person in a world that keeps on spinning. I don't dwell on the little moments. I don't stop and look around and analyze the world around me. I go through the motions day after day, forgetting my past and remembering my future.
I realize the importance of stopping for a second and analyzing the world around us- taking a mental image of what you have seen and seeing it for what it is. What is happening in the image? What is in the foreground? What is in the background? What is the message the image is giving you? How is it making you feel? Each and every single moment that we see can answer each and every one of these questions.
"What's the point of analyzing the things we see," you ask. When you analyze something, you learn from it. You remember it. Life is in these little moments. You learn more about yourself and how you feel about certain situations. "What we see changes how we see" (Schweinhart 1). So, instead of shrugging off everything you see, stop for a second and think, and you will feel much more fulfilled.

Comments

  1. The perspective you set up really brings a reminder on how the world is constantly in motion, always changing, and always developing. This is incredibly insightful, and you hold a great point with how analyzing something in the past can really enable growth within us without the struggle or process of trial-and-error preventing us from learning more!

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  2. This brings the thoughts of how short time is, which is exactly what you're saying is to stop and think, as you stated in the last line, and I completely agree with that, because time shouldn't be wasted, and when you stop and think about things or stop to do something you would feel more timely, or fulfilled.

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  3. This entrance has an almost poetic feeling to it, giving a bit of a different perspective of visual analysis. It certainly sounds better than the plain textbook definition. Also the link to the analysis on how we see things is a nice addition, and shows that you researched the topic.

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