This is the first of two posts that I have written in this series on the topic of the three levels of self-awareness. My goal in writing this series was to address the topic of the three levels of self-awareness, what it means to be aware of yourself, how we should be aware of self, and how we can be aware of others. You can read the first post here.
The main point of this blog is that it’s about how people learn. While I don’t want to be like some people who get a bad rap for not being able to learn how to read or read something, I want to be very clear about what I mean by it. To begin with, I want to talk about how we become aware of ourselves and of others. This is about how we become aware of ourselves—that we are aware of ourselves.
And then I want to talk about the process.
In this first post I want to talk about how I become aware of myself. To start with, I want to talk about the first level of self-awareness. We can become aware of ourselves as we begin to read and learn about the world around us. This is, the first level, the first and most basic step.
So the first step, the first and most basic step in self-awareness, is reading the newspaper and learning that the United States is the leader of the world.
Our eyes are the most important organ in our body. We can tell when they are tired, we can tell when we need them to be cleaned, and we can tell when they need to be cleaned. So let’s say you’re sitting in the middle of your bedroom doing nothing and you decide to take a quick look at the newspaper.
The newspaper will tell you that the U.S. is the leader of the world. And then the newspaper will tell you that if you read the newspaper carefully, you will find there is an enormous hole in your right brain. That the United States is the leader of the world. And then when you look closer and see the hole in your brain, you will realize that your right brain is broken. That you have been trying to read the newspaper and you have failed.
The problem with reading the paper is that it takes you a long time to get through all the words. If you’re reading the newspaper and it’s taking you an hour, there’s a good chance you’re not reading very fast. And so you have to pay attention to the tiny parts that you’re reading because you want to catch up with the rest of the words.