So, it was a Monday, and I was trying to get to my first day of work at my new job. I was driving along, and I realized I was in the middle of nowhere. I had no clue where I was or what the hell I was doing.
It’s like those pictures in your first puzzle book. You start with a blank page, and then you start to fill in the picture that’s on the page.
In the case of metaphor for a potential crisis, I like to think of it as a grid, and the picture on the page will be the grid, with a picture attached to the grid. (Note: in this example, the picture will be a picture of a storm at sea).
So how does this relate to our current situation? Well, we are now driving around on a road that is almost a straight line, with a small town in the middle of nowhere and a bunch of rocks in the middle of the road. This picture of a storm at sea will be the grid, and the picture attached to the grid will be a picture of an earthquake in Northern Japan.
Picture metaphors have been used to describe quite a variety of events. For example, the American Revolutionary War is sometimes referred to as “the Revolution on steroids” because of the sheer number of battles it required. In this case, “the storm at sea” is a metaphor for “the earthquake in Japan”, but only in a metaphorical sense.
In the case of disaster, the metaphor is much more accurate. But in the case of metaphor, it is very important to be precise. If the two images are not clear enough, and we don’t get a clear picture of what the earthquake is, we’re going to have trouble.
It’s because of the way the metaphor works that when the Japanese disaster hits, we have a lot of work to do. We have to go back and revise the earthquake metaphor to be very clear.
I can’t really say I like the metaphor one bit, but I do love the fact that the Japanese earthquake metaphor is very clear. It says what it needs to say: earthquakes happen, it happened. It doesn’t need to be complicated. I like the fact that this one is working better because it says what it needs to say about the earthquake.
An earthquake metaphor doesn’t need to be complicated, but I think it’s important to make it clear that something is coming, and it’s getting closer. This was a very clear, concise, concise and simple metaphor for the disaster. I was able to figure out what we needed to do, how we needed to do it, and how we needed to do it. It was very useful.
This is a metaphor for a potential crisis in terms of how we can help. We could help by being prepared, by being careful, by being vigilant, by being aware, by being responsible, by being prepared. It’s a very simple way of saying, “We should get ready, we should be prepared, we should be aware, we should be vigilant, and we should be responsible.