2021.06.27

Because of insomnia, I woke up late, without any energy. Noticing that it was already 7:49, I hurried to school and was grasping for breath desperately after my arrival, only to find my blurred vision of everything around me - I forgot to bring my glasses! Wondering why people's minds are so delicate that they need to be recharged every day to keep one's sanity, if so-called “sanity" really exists, I began to prepare for the lessons.

While I was trying to find some books, I noticed there was a round, yellow little thing in front of me and my thoughts were dragged into it strangely. Because of the blurred reality, I had no idea what it was. However according to Arthur Schopenhauer, the world of objects in space and time exists solely as representation dependent on a cognizing subject, not as a world that can be considered to exist in itself. One's knowledge of objects is thus knowledge of mere phenomena rather than things in themselves. "What is the phenomena of this round yellow little thing in front of me then?", I whispered to myself and decided to find out the "truth".

Round and yellow, it was perhaps the condensed setting sun behind "The Sower", which was painted by Van Gogh at Arles in 1888. The classroom was just like the field, and the teacher was the sower. While the sun was shining with an unearthly luminescence, as the preacher of knowledge, the sower was walking around the field with great patience and hope, endeavouring to convey messages from the sun to Earth. Only sunlight was poured up, and the hand of the sower was pointing down. At the same time, the seeds fell into the soil and then germinated, and new plants would appear. These plants then began to dream about being a sower and thus the messenger of the sun to the earth. New beliefs were running upon the half-empty field, telling a fairy tale about pure wisdom and infinity, which was merely a reflection of life's continuous process of the revival of nature though.

But when night falls, what would the sun want to be then? Maybe a twinkling star in the starry night. Van Gogh was always in love with the vast peace and majesty of the night sky and once wrote, "The sight of the stars always makes me dream". This time, the classroom was like the still town, emphasizing the dramatic action everywhere else. The hills were rolling. The cypresses flickered like flames. The sky flooded with soft swirls. The twinkle star was shedding gentle light, which began to form a bridge between the earth and heaven. All of this made me dream. I could feel that the everlasting energy of imagination and creation was flowing over me, setting me in a state of peace and serenity.

However, was that the truth I wanted? The separation line between my consciousness and reality escaped nowhere. It seemed like the yellow round thing only lived in the representation of my will. While I was thinking about it, the bell rang and forced to drag me back to the so-called reality. I stood up and walked to the round thing, only to find that it was a bottle cap, standing on the desk. "Well, this time, perhaps it should be the door watcher of the liquor of the esoteric doctrines then," I whispered to myself and smiled in relief.