Being unaware is like playing hide and seek when you don’t know someone is hiding right behind you. You’re busy looking in the wrong direction because you don’t realize they’re so close. Unaware means not knowing something is there, even if it’s right next to you.
Imagine your brain is like a flashlight in a dark room. Wherever you point the flashlight, you can see what’s there, but everything else stays in the dark. When you’re unaware, it’s like your flashlight is pointing one way, and something important is just outside the light. You can’t see it until you turn your flashlight in the right direction.
Think of it as a bubble around your head. Inside the bubble, you know what’s happening, like what you had for breakfast or your favorite toy. But outside the bubble, there are things you don’t see or know about yet. Being unaware is when something is outside your bubble, waiting for you to notice it. Once you learn about it, it pops into your bubble, and you become aware.