Gliderbmw, thanks for explaining.
Tomtegubbe wrote:...you need to consider the impact of it and be wise in how you put it into action so that others can receive it.
Good points there T, this is very important.
Regurgitating a direct (literal) wisdom exchange to someone else who wasn't there, like many religions do in their legacy works, is a huge source of mis-understanding/interpretations cesspool.
Like Gliderbmw said so wonderfully:
Quote:... even if vision recording device was plugged to my head - still, it won't transfer all energy that is felt...
Also, conductors of wisdom are prone to stain their alleged 'gifts to humanity' with mere personal treats (sh*t?), being unable to separate the two from each other, and maybe it's hard or even impossible to separate.
What works for me is integrating the experience in a way that I don't have to grab back to the lesson-quote any more. It just changed me and hence the way I interact with people in simple things like going to the grocery or work. For me it's not like ...Things are like such and so, case closed...
When it has finely changed me/you then you 'radiate' the lesson in gestures, pick of wordings, way of face language, the way you walk... Being the unadvertised example outclasses any explanation, it can hardly be explained anyway without being misunderstood.
Then you've become the lesson rather that regurgitating a lesson/wisdom-concept, people also grow weary of yet another wisdom lesson to cope with, "put it on the stack right there I'll come to that later, maybe." syndrome.
Have you noticed the sparkle in aya people's eyes? These eyes bring out a powerful 'message' stronger that any possible conveying of words-wisdom.
Words are cool though, very much tools also. These are words btw