6/ The person you take an answer from you also take a problem from. A real risk, as answers are cheap but problems are expensive.
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17/ The outer corridors of the labyrinth are simple to navigate; these contain the generic, the mundane, the day-to-day kinds of problems.
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18/ The light from the outside is visible and the voices of others can still be clearly heard in these corridors.
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19/ The further you venture into the other corridors however, the less you can hear the voices outside, and the less light enters the maze.
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20/ The deeper corridors are those of the purely individual dimension. Here the problems are absolutely personal, unique to each individual.
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21/ In these corridors you can only proceed on your own—no external light is there to direct you; the answer is as yours as the question is.
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22/ You visit these corridors not only to illuminate them but to understand how they connect and relate to those before and after them.
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23/ With a growing knowledge of the maze you retrace your steps so the next time you enter you can go deeper, take a different direction.
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24/ But if you are not careful and forget to hold the thread of memory and retrace your steps, you can lose your way and never make it out.
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25/ As you gain experience with each visit, the thread itself grows longer; but go farther than it allows for and you will again get lost.
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26/ Navigating the labyrinth and retracing your steps—understanding the problem & implications on the individual scale—is itself the answer.
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27/ The most common form of self-deception is one's propensity to think they have an answer when they haven't even started on the problem.
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28/ Every person's fundamental challenge in life consists not of finding the correct answer, but of correctly identifying the problem.
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29/ It is a never-ending, slow, and arduous process. The reward is you learn from yourself: what to look for, where to look for it, and how.
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