Directly and indirectly, generally and specifically, we have shown that the phrase “two truths” includes the synonymous meanings of “think and think again”, “preexist and exist”, “exist as one, exist as two”, “create and recreate,” “imagine and reimagine”, “consider and reconsider”.
This can be expressed as khiun and akhiun, which means to circle and circle again from low to high to low; circle one way, then the other; put the shoe on the other foot.
1. This phrase does not mean put your left shoe on your right foot and see how it feels.
2. It does not mean put my shoes on your feet.
3. It means first we must understand sameness in order to understand difference.
The point at which sameness and difference begin to diverge, is where we must understand why and for what purpose does this fulfill the supreme need-want incentive.
A foot khut is a seed packet of elemental souls of life.
Since a shoe holds and supports a foot, a shoe khiu is at the bottom, the foundation footing of each cornerstone pillar that forms and supports the heavens. These pillars imaged as mountains.
A shoe, like a khiu is one, two, three, four and five. For us humans, the number is two feet in the plainest sense; however the number is also one, three, four and five at a fuller level of awareness of our being, body, who we are and where we came from.
A Shoe Khiu Foot forms the cross, the spark, the circle, the basis that sparks healthy balanced conversation, conversing, conversion between and among spirit-souls.
Two More Ways To Understand The Need To Put the Shoe On The Other Foot
1. To make sure difference does not negate sameness does not negate difference.2. Both halves (karti) of the circle curve towards each other on both ends. They meet, merge, bond and connect in the middle width-wise at the equator and length-wise at the meridian. Each half of the circle contains two feet (the ends). This is equal to four feet or two feet and two hands converted from feet. Human feet slightly curve towards each other and meet in the middle as the balancing point equillibrium of the two halves of the human body. This allows for firm and steady footing when standing and when in motion. Thus the connection of putting shoes on feet to the thinking process.
3. More fully, putting the shoe on the other foot means to put the left shoe that curves toward the right on the right foot, and then because the left shoe on the right foot curves away, it means to go through a conversation process to convert and transform the shoe and/or foot, in order to understand the other way of thinking, how the thought was reached, what are the components, what is the fit.
4. Even more fully, put the shoe on the other foot means, put each shoe on the other foot, thus for each of the four shoes (khiu, corners) of the circle, view things from each position and think through things from each orientation perspective point of view.5. Thus the saying, look at it both ways, from the other side.
This is also why, before putting shoes on, we put them side by side to make sure we put the same foot in the same shoe.