What does the quote mean? I don't understand it
My reading is:
1) see things the way the things are
2) see things the way the viewer is.
"They" could attach to either the person or the things.
So, for me, I have a phobia of bees. So, say there's a honeybee hive in a tree a good 50 yards from me. It's not causing any harm. If I was seeing things the way they are I'd see a regular part of nature working. Instead, I see things the way I am, and the bees nest appears to be a natural disaster coming to get me at any moment.
To apply it here: how does one see a regular 9-5 job?
Is it: a normal part of life that can be a pain but is an understandable requirement to reap the benefits of society?
Or, is it: a symptom of a dystopian system; forced slavery for the sole benefit of the elite class that drains the poors for their own means?
Or maybe, in between: it is a normal part of life that is an understandable requirement to reap the benefits of living in society, but made far worse than it should be by a combination of those who have more power and a broken "system," disproportionately benefiting the haves over the have-nots while still barely providing the have-nots with enough opportunity to change their circumstances?
Or something else, but you get the picture. Which definition is seeing things the way they are, and which is a result of who the person making the definition is at heart?