To specialize in everyday life is to specialize in having an immediate opinion about everything, either ill-formed or poorly meditated on. In a very short time, the brain gets used to the poverty of criteria and even convinces itself that meditation is unnecessary, because it cannot add anything. Of course, often one has an accurate intuition of the facts, an intuition that no amount of meditation can replace. But when it comes to everyday life, what is presented as a “fact” is almost always a falsification of a fact or, at most, the fact itself unrecognizable because covered by a deceitful package designed to misrepresent it. As such, and as it is often tedious and difficult to remove the wrapping, the best thing to do, unless a sense of duty manifests itself, is to let it go.