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 October 12, 2010 from PreventDisease Website 
			 
 This ancient Chinese saying well illustrates how narrow our vision of the world and the universe can be. 
 
			We see the world from our limited 
			perceptual framework. Despite evolution of our race, an average 
			human mind is severely restricted by what it can perceive through 
			the senses. What we hear is limited by the frequency our ears can 
			process; dogs can hear many higher frequencies and hence, have a 
			very different perception of the sounds out there. 
 
			From our knowledge of science, we know 
			so many things are just not what they appear - earth is not flat, 
			the ground below us is not stationery and the sun doesn't rise in 
			the east. 
 
			The world out there is an unprocessed 
			and formless data, waiting to be interpreted by us. The human 
			nervous system takes in only the minutest proportion of the total 
			energy vibrating in the environment. Research shows that each 
			conscious moment is actually comprised of many much smaller and 
			unconscious "mini" moments, each appearing and disappearing rapidly. 
 As Marshall Glickman describes in his book 'Beyond the Breath': 
 
			We are so engrossed in this fascinating 
			movie that we are unable to step aside to distinguish between the 
			movie and the reality. 
 
			Thus, we don't see a mosaic of blue, 
			white and colorless space, but sky and clouds. 
 We are also quick to dole out intrinsic qualities to things and people, thinking "this is beautiful, that is ugly," without being cognizant of the fact that these attributes are assigned by our mind. 
 As a Buddhist verse says: 
 As we gain deeper insight, we learn that the smallest units of energy are just in free flow thought it all. 
 We create a three-dimensional world from what is a continuum of free flowing energy, comprising of electrons and neutrons. Like the fish in the Chinese saying, when we cannot see this continuum, we notice the separate parts of the creation the trees, the animals, the objects - as disjointed from us, which in turn make us feel separate from the whole. 
 
			The question is would a tree falling in 
			a forest make any sound, if there was no one to hear it? It's our 
			presence and perception that gives way to the formation of reality 
			as observed by us. 
 
			The powerful thing is that among all the 
			living beings, only human beings have the ability to comprehend and 
			experience this reality. We can get initiated into grasping this 
			reality by starting to reach out to our inner awareness. 
 
			While it's easy for us to initially get 
			swept away by the thought patterns and not be able to observe, 
			steadily we can begin to recognize the observer as distinct from the 
			thinking mind and the actor. We can then discover that this 
			awareness is like a mirror - it only reflects what the mind is going 
			through, without any projections of its own. 
 
			In our normal life, we are so busy with 
			external stimulus that we lose connection with our true self. As we 
			become more attuned to this awareness, we begin to get closer to 
			understanding our own reality - which in turn allows us to better 
			comprehend the truth out there. 
 
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