Clarity is seeing things as they are, not as you wish or fear them to be. It requires courage.
Mental clutter obscures clarity. Quiet the noise and the signal emerges. Clarity follows stillness.
Clear communication requires clear thinking. If you cannot explain it simply, you do not understand it fully.
Clarity about values leads to clarity in choices. Know what matters and decisions become easier.
Physical space affects mental clarity. Order your environment and your mind often follows.
Clarity is not certainty. You can see clearly while acknowledging uncertainty. Clear sight includes limits of sight.
Ask clarifying questions. Assumptions cloud perception. Questions dispel fog.
Clarity can be painful. Sometimes we obscure things to avoid seeing what we do not wish to face.
Seek clarity but hold it lightly. New information may clarify further, revealing that previous clarity was partial.