Every day we look briefly at things and dismiss them because
they are of no significance or of no importance at the time. What we see is not
crucial to our survival, nor does it have any bearing on what really concerns
us at that moment. We don’t want to waste time looking at these things, just as
we don’t want to waste time waiting at traffic lights! On the other hand we don’t
glimpse at traffic lights, but we pay attention to them, for our very lives can
be threatened if we ignore them.
When cruising my boat my senses are heightened and I am
aware of what is happening at all times. The great majority of decisions for action arise from
things seen, heard, felt, smelled or tasted. The sense of sight is the most
informative. Our eyes are designed for immediately detecting anything that
moves, particularly objects that may threaten us by travelling towards us. Even
the tiniest gnat is detected.
This heightened awareness when cruising my boat tends to
make me more conscious of things I would normally only glance at. Everything
becomes important, not just when sailing, but when ashore perhaps doing the shopping,
riding on a bus or going for a walk. Even chatting with people becomes a new
experience because of this heightened awareness. Attention spans are increased
and the recall of recent happenings improves. Memorization vastly improves. No longer
does the brain resemble a cabbage; it becomes a live, active, functioning
organism. The little grey cells become sparks of fire that send tingling
sensations down the spine. One becomes alive.
2 comments:
Beautiful words, thanks for sharing!
Thanks Dario,
I hope you are enjoying your music and others too who follow your blog. Keep at it.
Cheers,
Bill.
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