# The View

> *The View From Above*

**Language:** EN
**Source:** wecome1.com - Transparent Awareness

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Why do people look down on others?
The View From Above

How do people look from up there?

Small, right? Like… ants. Those people crammed together at the bus stop at eight in the morning,
soaked in the rain, thinking about their bills, counting their child's fever. As you watch them
from behind that glass, from the depth of that chair, from the height of that floor — something
passes through you, I can feel it. Who are these people?

I want to ask you that.

Who are these people?

You're right, actually — the answer is simple: they are you.

Yes, exactly you. Same species. Same factory, same victim of the same biological absurdity.
You open your eyes in the morning — powerful eyes, of course — but the mechanism of opening
is identical. Your stomach doesn't recognize hierarchy when it growls. The fear of death visits
the bedroom on the top floor at three in the morning with the same cold indifference. Your title
is useless in that darkness.

And you're still standing there, at the window, looking down.

Let me tell you a secret: height is not distance.

You are not above people. You are among people — you just happen to breathe in a more
expensive place. The same oxygen is in that breath, the same nitrogen, the same meaningless
amount of carbon dioxide. Your lungs know this. You don't.

What a beautiful home the ego builds. Walls made of "I deserved it," a ceiling of "I am different,"
a floor of "they just don't understand." And you walk through that house — no windows, no mirrors
— because a real mirror would bring the whole thing down.

So let me hold that mirror up for you now.

Look.

Look at how you look at those people. You filed their exhaustion under "laziness." You archived
their anger as "envy." You left their voice outside the door, labeled "noise." Very practical.
Very clean. Keeping a conscience this sterile is truly a skill.

But I wonder —

The first time someone made you feel small — do you remember it? That room where you shrank,
where your voice trembled, where your words weren't enough? That feeling — exactly that feeling
— is what you put the people down there through every single day.

The difference is: you turned that feeling into power. They are just trying to survive.

And you call this superiority.

Towers are tall, yes. They are impressive. They catch the sun first. But the wind hits them first
too. The earthquake reaches them first. And when they fall — when they fall — the rubble is
that much greater.

The higher you rise, the harder you fall.

This isn't just an English saying. It is physics itself. Potential energy increases with mass and
height — the higher you climb, the greater the kinetic energy of your descent. Newton wrote
this law with you specifically in mind.

So I ask you — the person at the window, the person sunk deep in the chair, the person who
grows with the size of their desk:

Are you really up there?

Or have you simply bought yourself more time before the fall?

The people below are still there. At the bus stop. In the rain. Pressed against each other.

And one day — maybe soon, maybe far away — you will be among them.

I hope on that day you remember: they knew you.

You never knew them.

*This piece was written to remind those who see themselves somewhere above it all
exactly where they actually stand.*