You’ve described habituation, and yes, it does cut both ways. You also speak of “pulling the unusual into ordinary experience”, as though that is undesirable, but contrarily, I find exactly that a central motivation to me. When I come upon things that on first blush inspire awe, my drive is to fully understand them, perhaps even to command them. I don’t think I know how to see anything as “bigger than myself” in a way that doesn’t ring simply as a challenge to rise above whatever it is.
You’ve described habituation, and yes, it does cut both ways. You also speak of “pulling the unusual into ordinary experience”, as though that is undesirable, but contrarily, I find exactly that a central motivation to me. When I come upon things that on first blush inspire awe, my drive is to fully understand them, perhaps even to command them. I don’t think I know how to see anything as “bigger than myself” in a way that doesn’t ring simply as a challenge to rise above whatever it is.