|
The Blind Ass
Bodhi



Registered: 08/16/16
Posts: 26,658
Loc: The Primordial Mind
|
|
Of course not, its just fun sometimes and great for certain things!
-------------------- Give me Liberty caps -or- give me Death caps
|
The Blind Ass
Bodhi



Registered: 08/16/16
Posts: 26,658
Loc: The Primordial Mind
|
|
Now stop bashing the inner critic before he cries and goes away forevr!!!!!!!!!!! 
-------------------- Give me Liberty caps -or- give me Death caps
|
RJ Tubs 202


Registered: 09/20/08
Posts: 6,016
Loc: USA
Last seen: 13 hours, 13 minutes
|
|
Imagine if you were an ape in a jungle and you realized you didn't notice a fig tree ripe with fruit.
And the competitive / neighbor tribe of apes saw the tree and picked all of the fruit.
The ape's self-critic would reinforce adaptive intelligent strategies for survival.
I never said the critic was bad or to be destroyed. Just understood.
|
The Blind Ass
Bodhi



Registered: 08/16/16
Posts: 26,658
Loc: The Primordial Mind
|
|
critic is slowly crying himself to sleep now thanks alot pal
-------------------- Give me Liberty caps -or- give me Death caps
|
The Blind Ass
Bodhi



Registered: 08/16/16
Posts: 26,658
Loc: The Primordial Mind
|
|
good points though
-------------------- Give me Liberty caps -or- give me Death caps
|
Jokeshopbeard
Humble Student

Registered: 11/30/11
Posts: 26,088
Loc: Deep in the system
|
|
Quote:
RJ Tubs 202 said: Imagine if you were an ape in a jungle and you realized you didn't notice a fig tree ripe with fruit.
I feel that every problem that plagues our species in our post-modern world can be traced back to a primal, survival instinct gone wrong because we changed our natural habitat, and have had nowhere near enough time to adapt to it. And perhaps we never will, with the accelerating rate of change.
Basically, I think we made a major fucking mistake coming down from the trees, and away from tribal living.
I wonder what cunt ever thought that was a good idea in the first place? Why do birds migrate only from here -> there -> back again, and great apes fight to control a single habitat, whilst humans got into their heads that it was a good idea to go and explore everything, outer space and the bottom of the ocean included? Why do we need to know what resides in places so inhospitable to us. Is it the inner critic, telling us that we're inferior if we can't 'master' this, that, or anything else? Or some other survival instinct gone wrong?
From what I can see, that thirst/need to push boundaries and explore is basically the cause of nearly all our misery, greed and fear of death aside. And yet, when we conquer some new habitat, our brains reward us with feel good chemicals.
Sometimes it really does just feel like a cosmic joke.
-------------------- Let it be seen that you are nothing. And in knowing that you are nothing... there is nothing to lose, there is nothing to gain. What can happen to you? Something can happen to the body, but it will either heal or it won't. What's the big deal? Let life knock you to bits. Let life take you apart. Let life destroy you. It will only destroy what you are not. --Jac O'keeffe
|
RJ Tubs 202


Registered: 09/20/08
Posts: 6,016
Loc: USA
Last seen: 13 hours, 13 minutes
|
|
In general, humanity is more interesting in exploring outer-space than inner- space.
Yeah, there seems to be an unquenchable thirst . . .
seeking, seeking
|
|