I am going to go out on a limb and actually say I can see how the lady might not recognize her own son.
No, seriously.
Picture this: she is out shopping, and to her knowledge, her husband has their son. So she is not going to be looking for nor expecting her son to be around. Out of the corner of her eye, she notices a kid kind of tailing her. Not wanting to be obvious about it, she never looks directly at him. But the kid continues to follow her, and she is starting to get nervous. You know how strange kids can be these days. So she contacts the employee of the store to report the weird behavior, never realizing that the kid tailing her is her own son.
Farfetched, you say? Kevin Smith's mother, who was not expecting to see him on tv protesting his own movie under an assumed name, looked right at her son and didn't see him as her son. Now, do you still think the above scenario is that implausible, unlikely, etc?
When things are out of the context you have set for them in your mind, you often don't see them as they are. Remember that.
No, seriously.
Picture this: she is out shopping, and to her knowledge, her husband has their son. So she is not going to be looking for nor expecting her son to be around. Out of the corner of her eye, she notices a kid kind of tailing her. Not wanting to be obvious about it, she never looks directly at him. But the kid continues to follow her, and she is starting to get nervous. You know how strange kids can be these days. So she contacts the employee of the store to report the weird behavior, never realizing that the kid tailing her is her own son.
Farfetched, you say? Kevin Smith's mother, who was not expecting to see him on tv protesting his own movie under an assumed name, looked right at her son and didn't see him as her son. Now, do you still think the above scenario is that implausible, unlikely, etc?
When things are out of the context you have set for them in your mind, you often don't see them as they are. Remember that.
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