Happy Friday everyone. Here’s something to reflect on over the weekend perhaps…
Today’s read is about 5-7 minutes. Post-read pondering not included. I’ve often described thoughts and feelings as if they were physical objects. In coaching sessions, I sometimes ask people to visualise scenes to help shift their perspective, and I’ve shared techniques that involve mentally moving things around to change their meaning. It wasn’t until years later that I realised not everyone can do this; some people struggle to visualise at all, while others can do it far more vividly than I can. This article reminded me how easily we assume others experience the world the same way we do. In reality, the opposite is more likely: each of us has a unique internal experience, yet we learn to generalise and adapt so we can align with the people around us. If we can do that in some areas of life, perhaps we could do it in many more?
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/feb/28/living-with-hyperphantasia
Last week’s riddle question and answer; What has a beginning, a middle and an end, but no physical form? A story.
This week’s riddle is; What has no beginning, no end and nothing in between?
Time for a moment to reflect, I think.