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Quotes about Perception

People in darkness don't know they're in darkness because it's all they've ever known. It's their world. They navigate primarily by bumping off things that are stronger. Immovable. They don't know darkness is darkness until someone turns on a light. Only then does the darkness roll back like a scroll. It has to. Darkness can't stand light. And it hasn't. Not since God spoke it into existence.
— Charles Martin
See it?" ... "Yeah." ... "How in the world did you see that in the first place?" "Don't know." "It's hard to make out." "Give it about ten minutes..." So we waited. Trying not to look at it so much that it lost all meaning. Like a word you say over and over until you're only hearing what it sounds like and you've forgotten what it means.
— Charles Martin
In school, I sat in the back, seldom raising my hand and never raising my voice. But the absence of verbal expression did not mean I was dull to the needs of others. Didn't mean I couldn't think and feel. Didn't absorb. I thought and felt just fine. Absorbed like a sponge. My peripheral vision was twenty-ten. I cried when strangers hurt. Laughed when others smiled.
— Charles Martin
World cannot be seen or even touched; they must be felt with the heart.
— Charles Martin
The lens of fear magnifies the size of uncertainty.
— Charles Swindoll
Faith is like radar which sees through the fog — the reality of things at a distance that the human eye cannot see.
— Corrie Ten Boom
Impossibility is more possible than everything which we hold to be possible.
— Karl Barth
People may hear your words, but they feel your attitude.
— John Maxwell
It's been suggested that successful communication consists of 7 percent content, 38 percent tone of voice, and 55 percent nonverbal communication. We're usually aware of the content of what we're saying, but not nearly as aware of our tone of voice.
— H. Norman Wright
Everyone has some kind of philosophy, some general worldview, which to men of other views will seem mythological.
— H Richard Niebuhr
"Mystery" referred to realities behind the appearances that one could observe by means of the senses. That is to say, though our hands, eyes, ears, nose, and tongue are able to access reality, they cannot fully grasp this reality. They cannot comprehend it.
— Hans Boersma
Such a person can see without "pre-judice", that is, without judging in advance; he will judge only on the basis of what he has really seen for himself.
— Hans Urs von Balthasar