Your ideas are complex, and I don't wish to comment on any but the first of them. You appear to be stating that life becomes worse as it progresses. Nothing could be further from the truth. All children find joy in life because for a child the world is full of wonder. To adults, it is more mundane. But, this does not mean that people cannot find joy and meaning later on in their lives. These people are not as easily found as happy young people, because it is easier to become disenchanted with life later on, but they are found. Think of the happy old people you've encountered, ones who find joy in their accomplishments in life, or find child-like wonder in seeing their grandchildren play. So, that's a counterexample to your argument. I thought the rest of it was very nice.
Your ideas are complex, and I don't wish to comment on any but the first of them. You appear to be stating that life becomes worse as it progresses. Nothing could be further from the truth. All children find joy in life because for a child the world is full of wonder. To adults, it is more mundane. But, this does not mean that people cannot find joy and meaning later on in their lives. These people are not as easily found as happy young people, because it is easier to become disenchanted with life later on, but they are found. Which is a counterexample to your argument.
Uh..so is that a good complement...or bad? sweatdrop
Your ideas are complex, and I don't wish to comment on any but the first of them. You appear to be stating that life becomes worse as it progresses. Nothing could be further from the truth. All children find joy in life because for a child the world is full of wonder. To adults, it is more mundane. But, this does not mean that people cannot find joy and meaning later on in their lives. These people are not as easily found as happy young people, because it is easier to become disenchanted with life later on, but they are found. Which is a counterexample to your argument.
Uh..so is that a good complement...or bad? sweatdrop
It's good, read the edited post. I forgot to restate my overall opinion at the end of the post. You put a lot more thought into this than most.
Your ideas are complex, and I don't wish to comment on any but the first of them. You appear to be stating that life becomes worse as it progresses. Nothing could be further from the truth. All children find joy in life because for a child the world is full of wonder. To adults, it is more mundane. But, this does not mean that people cannot find joy and meaning later on in their lives. These people are not as easily found as happy young people, because it is easier to become disenchanted with life later on, but they are found. Which is a counterexample to your argument.
Uh..so is that a good complement...or bad? sweatdrop
It's good, read the edited post. I forgot to restate my overall opinion at the end of the post. You put a lot more thought into this than most.
Hate just grows inside of us. It gets bigger and bigger until we finally do something about it and most of the times, when we let it go, it gets out of hands and somebody's life is ruined. We get labeled as a bad person, or hateful person and that title just grows into hate some more and it leads to something, one thing after the other.
Ah, hatred. What a familiar feeling.
Hate does have a great deal of negativity tied to it. However, those who have an unbelievably high amount of control and restraint like I do, can harness it.
Those who harbor lots of hate for something can be generally classified as dark individuals. Hatred usually comes from prolonged annoyance or a critical event that totally rubs you the wrong way.
This makes the individual fearful or it happening again or just plain annoyed about it. As time passes, it changes to anger. That anger, once refined is hate.
But you can deviate from that path. I don't make anger and hate. I create malice.
Malice needs not have a particular target like hate does. It's just being all around negative. Almost sinister in fact. Not to mention it barely plays off your temper like hatred.
The very fact that I'm a quite malicious person a good deal fo the time makes me rather invigorated. Extremely. I make unnecessary haste and don't give anyone a bit of my time unless I see fit. Sort of like a dark ego of sorts. Combined with my high unreactivity at all things that attmept to provoke me makes me have minimal conflicts with people. Though I may be very bitter at times.
Hatred however, when not managed, is usually stored and turned into rage. Rage is the epitome of being volatile and destructive. Everything around you (and yourself) are in serious danger. It's madness.
The flipside to that is extreme stress, despair, depression and misery. Which deteriorates the psyche. How foul.
So, in general, extreme negativity like hatred destroys the average person but there is a balance to everything. Exactly why I use this very darkness as my advantage.
I'm sorry im such a deep thinker sweatdrop It gets bothing sometimes because during class, I'll like completely zone out thinking about something and I'll miss what the teacher just said starexdstressed
do you learn more from your thoughts then from your teacher?
if so, why should you scourn yourself for escaping his attention?
thou doth agreest with thine's most intense reflection on this slow spiral towards death;this extended suicide. your observations bring more of he like;most making sense---most
to this ode to society and the scum just above it, i pray to thee, the most premium of kudos
I'm sorry im such a deep thinker sweatdrop It gets bothing sometimes because during class, I'll like completely zone out thinking about something and I'll miss what the teacher just said starexdstressed
do you learn more from your thoughts then from your teacher?
if so, why should you scourn yourself for escaping his attention?
1st question: In some cases, yes.
2nd question: Because most of the time when I zone out, I think of something completely different than what the teacher is teaching and I miss it. I'm trying to keep up my grades sweatdrop