Trajectory and Object.

I can only accurately focus on one of those at one given time. So what will I choose to focus on?  If I focus on the object, I will learn more about what approaches me.  If I focus instead on it’s trajectory, I can determine a course of action.

So I focus on the object at first.

What is this? I ask myself, as my neurons fire across networks to access all knowledge and experience I’ve ever had, in order to understand what this object is.

At a quick glimpse, all I know is that an object is moving near me. I examine it to comprehend what is happening.  If it is a mug falling, I try to “save it” by grabbing for it.  If it is a ball, I may decide to catch it.  If I did not see it in time, I am afraid of it and I move out of the way.  In order to know what actions I am to perform, I must see where it is going.  Since I cannot see the future, I must rely on remembering where the object’s previous point in time and space was just before I perceive where it is right now in space and time.

To accurately react to this object, I must toggle between the object and it’s trajectory in order for my brain to process it as a whole.  Perception and action are balanced in order to experience the whole of reality.

How one reacts to this is entirely up to the individual, regardless of the influence of external factors.  If one is to be aware, it is a chosen path and so it will be.  If one chooses to lose oneself in the whole, then it will be.  There is no right or wrong way to be, only differences in perception and action.  This creates a push and pull existence, known as duality.