1. Plausible Deniability
October 29, 2020
Looking through binoculars the wrong way will still show you what you’re looking at,
but a lot will be hidden from what you see when turning them around the right way.
However, walking up close to what your viewing will give you a clearer picture.
However, sometimes no two people will see things before them the same way. A high
powered telescope will not able you to see the mind of another…let alone your own.
Truth can be a rascal and corrupted as a device to snooker the uninformed by those that have
a self serving agenda. Spinning or omitting that which is left out makes what is said ‘fake’ or
untrue. Think of the husband who is working late, or working out at the gym, allegedly when in
reality he’s spending hundreds of dollars for an hour of sex with an escort. He of course omits
that when home to the wife while he brings her flowers. It’s a self serving insincere
communication of the censored facts often called ‘plausible deniability’.
Your life is so much better if you don’t look to deep into what every story is? Ignorance is bliss
… at least until the truth leaks out the cracks into the mind of reality. Life is about ‘truth and
love’, and when short changing either, there will be karma that comes suddenly out of the dark.
In the early 20th century, Mary Baker Eddy founded the well known newspaper of more truth in
1908, called the Christian Science Monitor. She didn’t do it to sell ads for horse-drawn
carriages or to support some political cause. She saw the power of journalism for good – not
just to inform, but to help hold up a higher standard. That meant staying away from the
sensational, but perhaps more crucially, it was also an investment in the potential of humanity.
Where goodwill and respect and responsibility and kindness and so on – all those core
qualities we’re taught in preschool – are present and active, extraordinary things happen, lifting
and enriching the world. Could a newspaper or TV news channel tell a story with high
standards? Not if it aligned with any partisan thinking or social cause.
Consider that each of us should have the same high standards in our personal and social lives.
The keys are to live in awareness with discernment for the best options while being in our
hearts, and with common sense. Always be closing the gap between who you think you are
and who you could be in the only reputation that counts most. That reputation is within. Each
of us should look for the keys to let out the ‘superconscious being’ that wants to come out.
Time is short, the road is long, better hurry! There comes a point in your life when your love for
yourself needs to become more important than your need to hold onto the past.
Arhata