A student asks what the teacher means by "this is it," and whether it simply refers to whatever is happening right now.
A student asks what the teacher means by "this is it," and whether it simply refers to whatever is happening right now.
When you say "this is it," does that mean that whatever is happening is it?
Yes. My point is that if I explain further, if I say more, then it's going to be less perfect, less direct, less clear. But yes. I was playing around with how to interpret the phrase: what is the "this" and what is the "it." You could say that whatever is happening is it. It is what you're looking for.
Thank you.