What do we know?
- naomikennedynaviga
- Jul 2, 2024
- 2 min read
I know something doesn't mean you can teach it.
To know something doesn't mean you have necessarily experienced it.
To take on a process or a practice takes time one to ground it in to your reality.
Two to really understand the internal shifting this can bring.
Once this occurs then you almost forget, and it just becomes part of your human.
Your movements are your truth.
But to truly live your truth will come with challenges and death of certain behaviours and patterns.
To live a life that your proud of and be the person you think you are you need to reflect and review.
If one does not review how they are doing- check the goals they have for themselves and review the progress and accept feedback.
Then one can speak what they know, but do they truely know it?
Can they truely deliver that transmission to you ?
Can they fully teach it is a totally different thing.
For teaching is a game of metaphors and if you don't fully know the grounded truth of the expressions and experiences to shift and adjust quickly to find a new metaphor for explanation becomes very tricky.
Summary and direct communication is key but not all brains will understand the first key turn.
So a true teacher must be able to follow your thoughts to understand where you are standing and what part of the garden are you observing.
To be better to guide you on the unseen paths that are the psychological association YOU have.
But that being said we teach what we need to know - to better know it ourselves.
Teach express explain and review.
The more you know ... The more you come to understand you don't know ... An it's all a game of comprehension.

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