Vision is more than sight, more than the eye can see, more than colors shifting with the sun and the moon, more than shapes in the distance, more than shadows on your path, more than what the world reflects back at you. Vision allows you to interpret the world and connect meaningfully with it. True vision is light reaching your eyes and your heart.
It is clarity in the unseen—the whispered truths often ignored. It is recognizing the weight of shadows as they stretch behind mimicking your every move. You see through lenses shaped by years, by losses, by laughter, by the quiet moments, etched in your mind, by words spoken and soon forgotten. You see connections, no one else notices, linking moments that others view as unrelated. You see a perspective only visible to you.
Sometimes vision is blurred by fear, or softened by hope. When you are scared or anxious, your ability to see situations clearly can become clouded. Fear can distort reality, making things seem worse than they are. Hope can change how you see things, making you more forgiving or optimistic. It may cause you to overlook certain harsh truths because you are focused on the possibility of a better outcome.
It can sharpen with pain, and sometimes it dims in peace. Painful experiences often bring sudden clarity. When you are hurt, you may see things more clearly—who you can trust, what really matters, or truths you may have ignored. Pain strips away illusions. In peaceful moments, you may stop analyzing or overthinking. Things feel calm and stable, so you do not feel the need to scrutinize everything. That mental stillness can make you more relaxed, but it may also make you less alert or perceptive.
Sometimes your sight is clear and in focus, other times, it blurs—with confusion and questions you cannot answer. You notice things others might miss, like the way light bends through a window, the subtle change in someone’s voice, the unspoken weight of silence. You see extraordinary beauty in what others dismiss as ordinary. To see is to acknowledge—what is in front of you, what is within you, what you try not to face.
But you know there is more to see. More than what is right in front of you. More than what you think you understand. A different way of viewing the world. Even in the blur, there is meaning. You search for clarity in the fog, for truth in each moment—even in the haze, truth can be seen. You are able to see the truth through confusion. You can see light in darkness, focus in chaos, and truth in uncertainty.
To truly see is not just to open the eyes. It is to open the heart to all that has been, all that is, and all that is yet to come. Even when your vision falters, even when you cannot focus, you know there is meaning in what you perceive and in what you are still learning to see. You want to see clearly—not just with your eyes, but with your heart.
Matthew 13:16-17
“But blessed are your eyes because they see, and your ears because they hear. For truly I tell you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.”
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