I thought I could see. I was wrong.

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You don't respond to reality first. You respond to what reality means to you.

How I learned to see.

In 2014, Joseph Jaworski told me something that stopped me.

We don't see reality as it truly is. And if we did, we'd know exactly what to do.

The idea fascinated me. And made no sense at all. Of course I can see reality as it truly is.

I was wrong.

What I didn't know then was that synchronicity was already leading me forward — in countless quiet ways — to unravel that mystery.

The most unexpected path was through images. Simple visuals that made the invisible more visible. I created over 2,000 of them in the past six years.

At first, I shared what others helped me see. Now I share what I see.

Seeing didn't arrive in a single revelation. It was a slow realization that I was seeing a bigger, deeper story — especially as I began commenting on LinkedIn posts, sharing what I was noticing that others seemed to miss.

And I began to see it in the ordinary moments of everyday life too. How seeing more clearly was transforming relationships, leadership, presence, listening. Moment by moment.

I began to call these moments miracles. Every act of clearer seeing was transforming reality right before my eyes.

What had to dissolve was believing I was the voice in my head. That's why I wrote The Perception Miracle: We See Reality As It Is. Or So We Thought.

The work is emerging at seedifferent.xyz.

Today, something is changing. AI is accelerating everything we do. Including what we don’t see.

Which means the question is no longer just whether we can see. It’s whether we can see before it does.