Reality Checkers

Can the presence of our reality be similar to the game of checkers?   With the interpersonal game of Reality Checkers, Victoria considers that our realities are checked by ourselves or others, i.e., victimized, checkmated, castled, pawned, kinged, or queened (their new verb forms) every day of our lives.

Further, she views the world stage being full of props which produces a reality (big or small/worldly or personally) that we are either assimilated into or that we question as to why it is the reality that we are told.   Each of us is also a checker on the board (world stage) but failing to stand strong in our own individuality one, out of many, will get all the checkers.

If we check it out, we could pass it by, gain by it, or go to the sweet bye and bye if our playing skills at Reality Checkers aren't sufficient to sustain our life on this Earth or the Earth's life.   Words and thoughts function as the checkers (act as guards) for each person's reality.   Questions are another type of checker which can promote deeper conversations that should expose greater understanding.   The job of Reality Checkers gets done when you use questions as your employee.   The frequent usage of who, what, when, where, why, or how assists in obtaining necessary information for these types of self‑preservation discussions.   With Reality Checkers a questioning of everyone's mind can occur.