What does it mean to truly meet something? A rose, a sunrise, a pencil, a thought, an emotion, a life partner, or even a stranger—how often do we actually encounter what is before us, and how often do we encounter only our ideas about it? In this episode, we explore the first dimension of seeing: Meeting. We examine how recognition, labels, judgments, memories, desires, and expectations can quietly replace direct encounter. Through everyday examples—from a sunrise at Kanyakumari and a pencil on a desk to workplace relationships, life partners, objectification, desire, and dehumanization—we investigate what happens when we stop assuming we already know and begin looking again. Along the way, we discover why familiarity can create blindness, how labels can hide the human being behind them, why desire narrows perception, and how fresh observation is connected to creativity, understanding, and genuine relationship. We also explore how meeting external objects can become a doorway to meeting inner objects such as thoughts, emotions, and reactions. Perhaps seeing begins with a simple shift: not immediately judging, not immediately concluding, but meeting. Because before we can understand reality, we must first learn how to encounter it. First Steps to Seeing Reality explores the art of seeing clearly—ourselves, others, and the world around us.