To look is to see and vice-versa! Admittedly to a layman and also in common parlance, we use the two interchangeably or synonymously. However, there’s a difference between the two if we contemplate it.
‘Visualisation’ is a curious issue having various aspects of interpretation. To look at something and to actually realise your vision is not always possible. There is just too much, all around us to see and process, so our brain deletes all that which is believed to be superfluous.
We come across hundreds and thousands of different things every day, millions of images are formed in our brain but do we remember them all? No. We precisely remember only those, which had been pondered over for a while or had been awarded a generous attention. Perceptions play an important role in the structural formation of these images in our mind. For instance, a single incident may be remembered in completely different ways by different individuals. The co-ordination of our eyes, optic nerves and the grey matter in our head determines it all.
Sometimes even the tiniest specifications become the guiding light or at times, even the solution to whatever we are stuck up with. This is not just an analysis for Sherlock Holmes or a detective in a crime show. This is life, in real occurrence! The practicality of a situation is perceived only when we try to interpret it with all our heart! People always see, what they want to see. Does that mean all what we don’t want to see is really redundant? No. To us all what is against the commandments is unwanted! But that is how Life is, after-all! If we could noticeably perceive the disparity between the good and the bad, the saint and the evil, then we would be living in Pandora’s world, without the box of troubles.
Instances of unjust wrath, displeasure, ignorance and annoyance caused due to wrongful interpretation of situations have made