Dr. Safal

Few, Some and Many

When there is potential which can be tapped, why not? Some say best not to tap, a few will not like it.

Few want it to be like this, many are made to be like that so few can be few and many can be many.

Us against us, humanity in slumber. Maybe there are few who worry about many and they are really few as few have to do all it takes to be few. Maybe there are some who look but turn a blind eye to many and maybe there are many who are busy in getting lost in one.

Self-conflict killing humanity, maybe exposure of few, some and many organises a human. Few see everything, some see something, many see nothing but void as many are blinded.

I can be what I want but am I looking in that direction, or am I made to look away? Or I don’t want to look because I am not that.

I am where I am supposed to be, is everyone else where they are supposed to be? Or is there where one should be, who decides that? A few or some or a many?

Man and his environment, man wanted to but environment made him many, environment wanted to but man became many but few fielded for man to be few. But the man against his environment of many falls if not genuinely serious and takes rest coming after him with him.

A many can be few and will be few and will take many coming after him into fewness. Many call him legend, some are debating, few feel lost.

Human is what he thinks he can be, moulded by his exposure. Deconditioning makes him few but what makes him few should arise from every fiber.

Eons go by, human can be better when self-conflict dies but will the few let it, or some want it to, or many realise it?

Eventually it is few, some and many as one many does not know to be few and few keep many many. If many become few, many becoming few calls for anarchy.

Human becomes by overcoming his mind and by himself.

Authored by Dr. Safal Sachidananda Shetty, an Interventional Neurologist & Stroke Expert in Bangalore with extensive clinical experience in stroke intervention, brain aneurysms, and complex neurovascular disorders. His mission is to educate and prevent stroke and provide advanced neurologic care using the latest medical innovations and minimally invasive procedures.