This is an attempt to give a systematic analysis of how to reason that is not tied to our European languages, to step out of our language conceptions and habits. Consider then this work as a bridge, a chance for us as speakers of languages that focus primarily on the world as made up of things to begin to see the richness and complexity of encountering the world as the flow of all, the one and not many. The contrasts, often unsettling, can lead us to understand better how we encounter and reason about the world as made up of things.