Know what you know.

Subject:
Know what you know.
From:
Kenneth Udut
Date:
10/10/2013 5:15 PM

Know what you know.

Take what you know. Stick a loop to it.

Stretch out the loop Until it’s touching you.

With the loop stretched, fold it back down and stick it to a blank space.

You now have three new things:

How does it matter to you? How do you matter to it?

Those are the two new edges formed.

But the two edges make a corner.

The corner asks how do WE (You and it together) Matter to somebody else?

If you ask “why do I care?”

Then stick loop to the new corner, and attach it to you.

The more you know, the more the dimensions grow. The more questions you ask, the more the dimensions grow. The more corners you solve, the more you know

The more you know, the more the dimensions grow.

The more the dimensions grow, The more details you know.

And the broader your knowledge is.

Because the loop that is created when you ask a question, can move.

And you can touch that loop to anything you already know.

And ask new questions such as:

How do I find someone who is lost within the system?

How can the lost one find me?

That becomes how can someone help us find each other? And that becomes a corner.

And if you want to simplify everything, Attach one part of the Loop to the furthest thing in one direction. Attach another part of the loop to the furthest thing in another direction.

Then pick up the loop and bring it toward you.

Then you become the corner.

The paper lifts off the table and forms a new corner. That you can fold.

You can hook everything on a piece of paper to you and fold it back, flat.

New wrinkles that form, show hidden connections.

If you can draw it on a piece of paper, then you can simplify it.

You can pull it toward You until it fits into your brain.

And then you understand.

You don’t need two eyes to see in 3-D.

You don’t need eyes at all.

As long as you are conscious, You can connect anything to yourself.

My name is Kenneth Udut. I am 41 years old. Born legally blind in one eye, And limited vision in the other, I was told that young age that I could never see it in 3-D.

I set out to prove that not only could I see in more dimensions then they could possibly have imagined, But that I would prove it to the world, And change reality itself.

(It’s all in the parentheses. The loops. In these parentheses, I will show you something I could easily have hidden in an inner dimension. I will pull out the loop and connect it to you so you can see.

As I Spoke “I would prove it to the world” I said “comma”. I tried to speak the rest of the phrase. But I responded emotionally. And I started to choke up. It took a few tries to get the words to come out of my mouth. “And change reality itself.”

That was the moment I found the corner. Turned the corner. Found my purpose. )

Simplify English by breaking up sentences by their punctuations.

Make a loop out of each one and nest them.

You can use parentheses.

But first count the existing parentheses as well.

You should be able to analyze any document this way, Long or short.

The distance between any two punctuation marks Is a loop.

Quotes have their own inner loop.

No, use quotes instead of parentheses so you don’t have to try to balance them out.

But, you will lose any sense of direction.

That is a good thing.

Since in the end, aren’t you searching for a single set of quotes that contains everything?

When you do research and replace, allow things to retain their identities. So, parentheses can become””Left parenthesis” and “right parenthesis”” Since they also have lives of their own.

[responsivevoice_button voice="US English Male"]

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