The black dot

One day, a professor entered his classroom and asked his students to prepare for a surprise test. They all waited anxiously at their desks for the exam to begin.

The professor handed out the exam papers with the text facing down, as usual. Once he handed them all out, he asked the students to turn over the papers.

To everyone’s surprise, there were no questions – just a black dot in the center of the paper.

The professor, seeing the expression on everyone’s faces, told them the following: “I want you to write about what you see there.”

The students, confused, got started on the inexplicable task.

At the end of the class, the professor took all the papers, and started reading each one of them out loud in front of all the students.

All of them, with no exception, defined the black dot, trying to explain its position in the center of the sheet.

After all had been read, the classroom silent, the professor started to explain:

“I’m not going to grade you on this. I just wanted to give you something to think about. No one wrote about the white part of the paper. Everyone focussed on the black dot – and the same thing happens in our lives.

“We insist on focusing only on the black dot – the health issues that bother us, the lack of money, the complicated relationship with a family member, the disappointment with a friend.

“The dark spots are very small when compared to everything we have in our lives, but they are the ones that pollute our minds. Take your eyes away from the black dots in your lives. Enjoy each one of your blessings, each moment that life gives you. Be happy and live a life filled with love!”

Source: http://www.rogerdarlington.me.uk

The US Postal Service issued a Forever stamp in August 2021 to commemorate the total solar eclipse across continental United States. It features an eclipse, but by placing a finger on top of the image, the heat of our body reveals a picture of the glorious moon taken by NASA astrophysicist Fred Espenak. The stamp is printed using thermochromic ink that responds to the body’s heat. Image courtesy https://news.utoledo.edu/