We often move through life seeing things as separate—people, choices, events, even parts of ourselves. We label and divide, believing that one thing causes another, that everything must be connected by a thread we can trace. But maybe the problem began when we started cutting life into pieces in the first place. The world itself isn’t broken apart—it flows as one whole movement. It’s our minds that do the slicing.
Every time we pay attention to something, we leave out everything else. To notice one thing is to ignore another. It’s not a flaw, just how attention works—it sharpens one corner of experience and blurs the rest. You can drive for miles while talking to someone beside you, never really “seeing” the road, yet every part of you is responding to it. You can spend an evening with a friend and later realize you don’t remember what they were wearing. You saw it, but it didn’t register because it wasn’t what your mind found meaningful at that moment.
We like to think we’re seeing the whole truth, but mostly, we’re seeing what feels important to us—what protects our image, confirms our beliefs, or secures our place in the world. Our attention bends toward what seems useful for our survival, our social standing, or our ego. The rest fades quietly into the background.
But sometimes, awareness widens. It’s not something we force—it just happens, maybe in a quiet walk, a pause, or a deep breath after a hard moment. You begin to sense that everything moves together, that nothing stands alone. The world stops being a list of causes and effects and starts feeling like one continuous unfolding.
In those moments, there’s no need to separate or explain. You simply notice the whole. Life feels softer, more complete. Like realizing the cat never was two halves—it was always one.