A Fascinating Response #GuestReaction by Jina S. Bazzar

{I read the entire article through the link and yes, That was very interesting. Here’s one more thing for you to think about. Blind people, I mean those who are born blind, think about things in terms of color (as a friend once told me). I became blind at the age of 22, so when I think about something I have never seen before (before someone describes it to me), my mind gives it the characteristics it thinks it should have. For example, a person I have never seen or met before. Per the way they speak, act, smell, my mind builds up a visual image. Many times, it is the wrong one. I remember I once gave a guy a mustache, glasses, a broad frame. He was none of that, but that’s how my mind saw him and even after I was given a proper description, that image stuck.}

Thank you to AuthorsInspirations for this amazing response. Much to ponder here! Just randomly added a song that is currently playing on the radio. One of my ‘golden oldie’ faves. No relevance, just wanted to.

TBH.

The fascinating reason that children write letters backwards — ideas.ted.com #GuestBlog

Hint: it has something to do with why we believe the earth is flat until we’re taught otherwise in school. Neuroscientist Mariano Sigman explains how the process of learning involves a certain amount of un-learning what we intuitively know. Common sense suggests that learning consists of acquiring new knowledge. Socrates, though, proposed that it involved…

via The fascinating reason that children write letters backwards — ideas.ted.com

darling (my little minx)

Do not be excited about me.

Be excited because of me.

Be excited for you are in ‘oneness’ and I want to stroke your brow as you sleep.

To tell you everything is okay. To tell each and every breath you take that it is beautiful.

Because … it is.

TBH

(Poster not my own… it is shared.)

{You are a darling and a minx. I am very proud of you.}