observation | Transitions Intl
-1
archive,tag,tag-observation,tag-407,stockholm-core-2.2.8,qodef-qi--no-touch,qi-addons-for-elementor-1.5.2,select-child-theme-ver-1.1,select-theme-ver-8.7,ajax_fade,page_not_loaded,,qode_menu_,qode-mobile-logo-set,wpb-js-composer js-comp-ver-7.9,vc_responsive,elementor-default,elementor-kit-1318

Five Benefits To Being An Observer

I was watching a TV serial the other day. The gist of the story is as follows : Two people who love each other get married. The city they are getting married is under a high security alert. Unfortunately, on their wedding day, a bomb is found in their wedding premises and the girl's uncle and brother (who gets shot as one of the terrorists) are accused as the terrorists since the circumstantial evidence says so. The girl is a lawyer and her heart tells her that they are innocent and she decides to defend her uncle and prove that her brother was innocent. This move upsets her husband and her in-laws who have lost his brother and son respectively. As an observer, you know the real terrorist but this is not known by the girl or her husband and her in-laws. Without getting involved emotionally in the events, as an observer, you feel that the girl is right from her perspective and the same can be said about her husbands' and in-laws perspective, especially from an emotional angle. Yet as an observer you also know that this girl's husband and her in-laws are being clouded by emotions and fail