Seeing Annie Dillard Analysis

Words: 639
Pages: 3

People Should Appreciate the Meaning of Sight in Their Life
“Above all, watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places” -Roald Dahl, a British novelist. Most people live life day after day, week after week, doing the same things they always do. Not many people look deeper at the world around them to appreciate the meaning of sight in their life, even though they should. In Annie Dillard’s essay, Seeing, she explains that looking past anything insignificant in your life can help you enjoy the life you're living in. In Dillard’s essay she tells of people who, after having cataract surgery, are confused of what they're seeing and don't understand it. She tells us
…show more content…
For instance, Dillard explains. “In general the newly sighted see the world as a dazzle of color patches. They are pleased with the sensation of color, and learn quickly to name the colors…” (29). People who first see the world are astonished at what they see which helps them understand the meaning of sight. Above all Dillard tells us, “It oppresses them to realize, if they ever do at all, the tremendous size of the world, which they had previously conceived of as something touchably manageable” (30). Even though sight is new and astounding, it can also be hard for some to fully comprehend. Nonetheless, sight is bewildering and exciting for people who look at the world for the first time in their life.
Annie Dillard showed how people who see for the first time begin to understand the meaning of sight in their life. In addition, she revealed how people apprehend the things that they see around them. Even if it’s hard for them the first time. Dillard knew that not all people have the opportunity to wake up everyday and see all of the things that someone with sight can see, nevertheless she showed us how they saw things in their own way. Sometimes people are too focused on what's in head them that they forget to look at the things right in front of them. Just like Dillard realized in her