Religious Views:
The inability to avoid the fact that we all share a single planet together - regardless of what you think or believe in
Religious Views:
The inability to avoid the fact that we all share a single planet together - regardless of what you think or believe in
Posts I wrote in the past contain less nuance.
If you're in this forum to learn something, be careful. Lots of misplaced toxicity.
~an extraverted consciousness is unable to believe in invisible forces.
~a certain mysterious power that may prove terribly fascinating to the extraverted man, for it touches his unconscious.
I don't know, but it doesn't sound all that unlike something I might say. Except... nicer?
.The kind of love we should advocate is the wider love that you can have even for someone who has done harm to you: your enemy.
Posts I wrote in the past contain less nuance.
If you're in this forum to learn something, be careful. Lots of misplaced toxicity.
~an extraverted consciousness is unable to believe in invisible forces.
~a certain mysterious power that may prove terribly fascinating to the extraverted man, for it touches his unconscious.
Sounds like an ENFj thingy.
, LIE, ENTj logical subtype, 8w9 sx/sp
Originally Posted by implied
That quote is stupid though. It's not really possible to love your true enemies, that's why they are your enemies. Like, duh! Somebody that doesn't want to bring you down in with them, but somebody that wants to change you too much or deny your very existence. To me, those are your true enemies. Most people make fun/bother you simply because they want to be your friend but don't understand you. A true enemy to me is somebody that cannot accept when you just can't do something.
We usually love people that hurt us. In fact, I hate people that say over-encouraging things or have to tell me they love me every three seconds. That is just insecure and weak.
This is actually more complicated than it sounds. It's the reason why Christianity is bogus, too.
Yes it is. You have to understand them; when you can actually grasp why someone might have done something evil or ill-intended to you or someone you care about, it's impossible to hate them without making a conscious effort. That has been my experience, anyways. My grandfather's second wife married him for his money, or at least claimed to, and when I found that out I hated her with a passion, because he died having spent all of his money and the last months of his life building an extension for her house. I loved my grandfather more than any man on this planet except for my father, nearly as much, and I hated that woman. But when I learned more about her family history and the things she had gone through in life, I couldn't even force myself to harbor more than a tiny misgiving about having sympathy for her.
But maybe that's just me.
But, for a certainty, back then,
We loved so many, yet hated so much,
We hurt others and were hurt ourselves...
Yet even then, we ran like the wind,
Whilst our laughter echoed,
Under cerulean skies...
I agree that the quote sounds Fe, btw.
But, for a certainty, back then,
We loved so many, yet hated so much,
We hurt others and were hurt ourselves...
Yet even then, we ran like the wind,
Whilst our laughter echoed,
Under cerulean skies...
.