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We do not see the world as it is we see it as we see ourselves!

passion for learning

SAPERE VEDERE means KNOWING HOW TO SEE

We see with our perception?

What is Perception

Your Perception is Your Projection

Your perception of people, facts, and circumstances is what you end up projecting onto the world. You must not let limiting para­digms from your environment and other people (the outer world) influence or alter your beliefs about yourself (the inner world). Start asking yourself these key questions: Who am I? How are my limiting beliefs affecting me? What am I reading? What am I saying? Where am I going? What am I thinking? What am I becoming? Then ask yourself this question: Is this what I want for myself?

Make a list of your beliefs and say, “I believe that. _________.” Then ask yourself: Does this belief serve me? Does it uplift me? Does it make me want to act and do the things that I want to do? Am I will­ing to do what I want to do? When you impress upon your mind new paradigms and beliefs, you will get new results.

Your life does not get better by chance. It gets better by change and by the higher awareness of your personality.

What Do You See?

What you perceive will always reflect and resonate with your be­liefs. Your life circumstances match your perceptions, which result in your point of view. Your mind gathers information, processes it through a set belief system and produces your view of the world. In contrast with the other intellectual faculties, perception is always enabled because it helps us to survive.

Imagine standing in front of a beautiful white chair. You like it a lot, so you tell your friend, “You know, I was at the Smiths’ house yesterday and they have a beautiful white chair. It’s a piece of art.” And your friend is amazed, because he was at the Smiths’ house two days ago and did not see a white chair. After a lively discussion about the chair, you soon realize that you were standing near the window looking at the front of the chair and he was standing near the door looking at the back of the chair. The chair was half white and half black, but you would have bet that the chair was white based solely on the angle you saw it from.

We believe what we see with our eyes, but sometimes we do not question the accuracy of what we see. Question what you see. Your perception is a servant to you and what you assume to be true is determined only by the level of awareness you have devel­oped. Constantly look for the good in people and situations. What do you see?

We do not see the world as it is we see it as we see ourselves!