Early in the beginning hours of a new day, a Sunday, the start of our week, it's not strange to muse a bit about "newness".
Newness can be good, I guess.
What I'm thinking, is that, in today's world we ARE flooded, "inundated" by such a constant and overwhelming stream of "new" information, we sometimes forget what is "new" to us, may have been around for a long time. Itmay already be known to many other people in fact.
Doesn't necessarily lessen the importance of the lesson (Catch that word play?).
The fact that we have learned a fact, or been inspired to give thought to a thought, has an importance of its own beyond the value of the information itself.
Years ago, I first read this statement by Francis Bacon (1561-1626) "Reading maketh a full man; conference [discussion or debate] a ready man; and writing an exact man."
The point being, I guess, that, just as with physical fitness, mental exercise is of value in keeping a healthy mind.
The body doesn't care how old the barbells are that it lifts, and responds to.
Lifting, moving, and examining the thoughts of others, can help make OUR minds stronger and better prepared to live in this challenging, and, often contradictory, world.
Exercising our minds, even with old thoughts, might just give us new strengths.
Donovan Baldwin