The real question is this: when you see "green," do you see the same color "green" that someone else does, or does everyone's "green" look different and we just all say "Hey, that's green!" because we've all been trained to recognize our own special color as green.
I spent four years at RCC to get a two-year degree which actually amounts to very little except that it allowed me to skip all non-essential and otherwise time-wasting classes at SOU. I graduated from SOU with a Bachelors degree in Psychology (I haven't actually seen the degree yet but I have a very nice looking, complimentary diploma cover for it). Now that I have accomplished so much and am well educated beyond the realm of high school, I can proudly say I have joined the thousands of other college graduates who are in debt but out of a job!! Life is great!
Oh who am I kidding?! There are at least five different books that I've started and I don't think I that I've made it half way through any of them. I have a bad habbit of starting a book because it looks really interesting and then inevitably I get busy with something else and the poor book just sits unfinished. I guess you could say I "read around". I'm horrible that way.
2 comments:
That is a good question. Why don't you ask a blind person?
Miss ya up here bud.
The real question is this: when you see "green," do you see the same color "green" that someone else does, or does everyone's "green" look different and we just all say "Hey, that's green!" because we've all been trained to recognize our own special color as green.
You know, it's not easy, being green.
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