Said vs Saying

Said vs. Saying - Catlynh Phan

    Language has more power over many things than we think. To be said versus to be saying explores the concept or present versus past. It also controls the way we experience certain interactions. Emmanuel Levinas introduced this philosophical concept when describing the Said as what is interpreted literally by people as closed meaning and describing the Saying as that which opens the narrator to meaning. When we are saying, we open ourselves up to be changed and understood by others, whereas when we said, we close ourselves to external meaning making. 
    Saying is an act of meaning making during a long journey when we meet people along the way. The people change our meaning.

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