When I look around, what do I see? I see precisely what’s inside me. These things, people, places, all reflect my thoughts and beliefs. If I see it, it’s me – I am that.
Before I retired one of my co-workers annoyed the hell out of me. Something about him rubbed me the wrong way. One day I had an epiphany – I am Bob! I am the annoying guy! For 30 years I’ve advocated what I call the mirror concept – this is what it means. I am what’s reflected back at me from my environment. I am Bob.
Owning this can feel like swallowing a giant pill. Who willingly admits they ARE what they find hideous – or even mildly irritating? Some things are just too up close and personal. Must I be responsible? Yes. I must. Esther Hicks tells me that things wouldn’t show up if there’s nothing in my vibration drawing it there.
When I acknowledged Bob as Me, my judgments eased. I cut him slack; treated him differently. Over time he reacted to me differently. Our relationship changed when I changed.
Change starts with awareness, and with an open mind acceptance may follow. Awareness and acceptance can change the world.
“Belief: When you believe something, you have made it true for you. Thought: What you do comes from what you think. Perception: Everything you perceive is a witness to the thought system you want to be true.”
Perception is a mirror, not a fact.
And what I look on is my state
of mind, reflected outward.”

Gifts from A Course In Miracles F. Vaughan, R. Walsh


Nope. No Poop Fairies – not for our pups, not for us.
Why is proclaiming this as my mantra to EVERYONE undesirable?

Bill Gates and Barak Obama included the book Factfulness, by Hans Rosling on their 2018 summer reading list. I’ve been a Rosling fan since I stumbled onto his TED Talk: 
“Being humble, here, means being aware of how difficult your instincts can make it to get the facts right. It means being realistic about the extent of your knowledge. It means being happy to say “I don’t know.” It also means, when you do have an opinion, being prepared to change it when you discover new facts. It is quite relaxing being humble, because it means you can stop feeling pressure to have a view about everything, and stop feeling you must be ready to defend your views all the time.”