We don’t see things as they are, we see things as we are.
As we are learning O.B it is becoming quite clear as to our decisions are made. The decisions are generally based on our perception of what reality is, and not on reality itself.
This can be understood as different individuals may look at the same thing, yet perceive it differently. If you expect the police officer to be corrupt you may think them as such regardless of their actual traits.
The above stated facts can be easily be proved through a medium of a movie because when you view and experience something that has a higher impact on your mind rather then just listening from someone or just reading it. The Movie is quite old and is in Black and White, I know how difficult it is to see a black and white movie in today’s world but I request you to watch the movie 12 Angry Men.
I will just give a jest of the movie 12 Angry Men (1957) is a very ambiguous film and it's open to many interpretations. On one hot summer day in the 1950s, 12 jurors meet in a room to come to a verdict in a murder trial. Everything seems to be going against the teenage boy whose father was stabbed to death with a knife. The evidence is damning and it doesn't help that he's a poor kid from the slums. All of the jurors think the kid's guilty, except for one: Henry Fonda's character Juror #8. They sit in the hot room arguing about the evidence, witness testimony and circumstances. It gets very heated in more ways than one. The final verdict is reached after what seems like a very long time. Was it justice? Was it the result of the frustrations of being in a very hot room for way too long? Was it manipulation? Who knows? And that's the thing. No one ever really knows the truth in circumstances such as these. You just try your very best.
In end while making an important decision about someone it is very important that our perception does not dominate our thought process there as to a balance between the thought process and perception.

