Objects of desire…

By Vichara


There are times that we can feel like one of those greyhound dogs racing around a track trying to catch that elusive, artificial rabbit. In the mind of the greyhound the rabbit is real, the object of desire and fulfillment. But because of the deceptive and short-term memory with the nature of these attempts for fulfillment, the greyhound forgets that the rabbit is not real in as much the same way we fall prey to the smoke and mirrors of desire. We see the glitter and perceived charm of something desirable that has been dangled in front of us but once acquired it holds little emotional value. The attachment to things keeps us prisoners of our own desires. Like the old adage, all that glitters is not gold, holds true as those things that have great value are those things that can’t be acquired by monetary means, but by the heart.

exoteric • \ek-suh-TAIR-ik\ • adjective
1 : suitable to be imparted to the public
2 : belonging to the outer or less initiate circle
3 : external

Example Sentence:
As specialist writing for a broader audience, Annette faces the challenge of producing an exoteric synthesis of complex information.

Did you know?
"Exoteric" derives from Latin "exōtericus," which is itself from Greek "exoterikus," meaning "external,” and ultimately from “exo," meaning "outside." "Exō" has a number of offspring in English, including "exotic," "exonerate," "exorbitant," and the combining form “exō-” or “ex-” (as in "exoskeleton" and "exobiology"). The antonym of “exoteric” is "esoteric," meaning "designed for or understood by the specially initiated alone”; it descends from the Greek word for "within," "esō."

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