Between "me" and "myself"

Derick 2022-04-19 09:02:48

The distance between "me" and "self", perhaps the distance between reality and dream, is subtle and magical, perhaps not so magical. But it's definitely subtle.

When we want to be ourselves, we must first know who that "self" is? Otherwise, you may only be trapped in "me". "I" can be seen in reality, but the "self" needs to be seen in another form through the "me", so as to recognize the "me".

This process from "me" to "me" and then to "me" is presented in this way in the form of drama, just like the little girl in the drama, who has been controlled and drawn by her "self" all the time. She uses "self" to let more people go from "me" to "self" in another mirror world. Because that kind of performance can move people the most and move oneself, and can best represent the real life itself.

Drama comes from life. Life can be physical or abstract. When you want to escape from "me" to "self", there must be something in the real world of "me" that is unwilling to continue. It is a kind of escape or escape, but it is real. If there is no such pull between "me" and "self", there is only "me", that is also a kind of life, but in this life you have not yet discovered the existence of other worlds.

You haven't found and seen it, maybe you haven't found it yet, or that "I" is preventing you from seeing "self" and walking in, because there are many "Is" that are jointly telling and conveying us, which one is not Sanity (Void).

But I believe that everyone has a "own" world. Just like I saw a passage in a book shared by a friend in the circle of friends a few days ago: "Can novels make some real conclusions about the world? - This question is wrong, because novels do not want us to go. Believe something (philosophically), but imagine it (artistically): "Imaging the warmth of the sun on your back and believing that tomorrow will be sunny are two very different things. One experience is perceptual, the other is purely abstract. We tell a story, and while we may hope to convey a lesson, the main goal is to provide an imaginary experience.”

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Extended Reading

Phoebe in Wonderland quotes

  • [first lines]

    Peter Lichten: Happy Birthday!

  • Miss Reiter: [to the class] What do we know about Good Job Jenny?

    Phoebe: [under her breath] She deserves a slow and painful death.