mibuchiha Posts
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
since i dont have sig, i'll just rate Milhi. 8.
My waifu are Luca Trulywaath and Clarisse McClellan
My waifu are Luca Trulywaath and Clarisse McClellan
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
The traps are.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Uh wat. Lighten up?
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
I wouldn't bother trying to help if you've already given up (as indicated by you stating you're an idiot over and over) but really, stop with the prof.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
I take that as you don't know what principle of least action is.
Well whatever. I ask you to stop with the prof. I don't think I deserve that label yet.
Well whatever. I ask you to stop with the prof. I don't think I deserve that label yet.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
I wish I can understand it someday. And that my current happiness will last til the day I cease to exist.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Principle of least action. Since I don't bother with it, and you should not too, since you tell me not to, why waste energy typing it?
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
I don't need the prof attached to my name. I do what everyone else does, think.
@art: well, yeah. though I don't understand why I specifically and humans in general yearn for happiness so much when it is so easily corrupted. Forget outside factors, we can ruin our own happiness just by being immature/stupid/cowardly/etc.
@art: well, yeah. though I don't understand why I specifically and humans in general yearn for happiness so much when it is so easily corrupted. Forget outside factors, we can ruin our own happiness just by being immature/stupid/cowardly/etc.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
It is mostly unrelated to the freedom thing. I quoted it only because the very concept of "worth it", to me at least, would only be thought of by happy people. Therefore it is biased since only a group of people, having nothing to do with intelligence/reason in general, is able to believe in it.
The quote is pretty simple actually. Take happy people. There are so many factors of happiness, all of which must be fulfilled at the same time for the person to be happy. As such, all happy people are alike, since they're the people with 'all the factors fulfilled'. While unhappy ones may fail in a certain factor, and another unhappy person fails in another. The failures may be very different, but all leads to unhappiness while only one case leads to happiness; no failures.
That is to say... happiness is really fragile.
@Rise: I don't accuse anything, but try not to pretend you understand if you don't.
The quote is pretty simple actually. Take happy people. There are so many factors of happiness, all of which must be fulfilled at the same time for the person to be happy. As such, all happy people are alike, since they're the people with 'all the factors fulfilled'. While unhappy ones may fail in a certain factor, and another unhappy person fails in another. The failures may be very different, but all leads to unhappiness while only one case leads to happiness; no failures.
That is to say... happiness is really fragile.
@Rise: I don't accuse anything, but try not to pretend you understand if you don't.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
I feel so lonely. No one wants to reply to my post. >.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Whether it is worse or better is up for debate. However, I say it is worse because simply by being born, we're forced to be free. The freedom to attach meaning to things. Poverty is bad? Not really, only us say so. Being fit is good? Nah, it is simply us liking to be healthy. Surely healthy is good, or at least favorable? Only because we think so. We simply cannot help to put a meaning into something. While the meanings we attached into things may vary, we simply cannot help thinking in terms of meaning. We cannot avoid that.
And that's the freedom I was talking about. The freedom we never got to deny.
And by "it's better to be a rock", I was referring to this freedom too. I think it is simply easier without such a freedom. Of course, without that we wouldn't even have a mind, but it is having a mind that is the hassle.
@art: I believe I dismissed the concept of "worth it" with what I wrote. It is only worth it because we think it is. Not to mention only a happy man is able to cherish such a freedom, despite the fact that it is a forced one.
Tolstoy's Anna Karenina: "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
And that's the freedom I was talking about. The freedom we never got to deny.
And by "it's better to be a rock", I was referring to this freedom too. I think it is simply easier without such a freedom. Of course, without that we wouldn't even have a mind, but it is having a mind that is the hassle.
@art: I believe I dismissed the concept of "worth it" with what I wrote. It is only worth it because we think it is. Not to mention only a happy man is able to cherish such a freedom, despite the fact that it is a forced one.
Tolstoy's Anna Karenina: "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Of course one is. Just by being born, you're forced to face all crap you never wanted to. And worse of all, you're condemned to be so fucking free you involuntarily attach meaning onto things. And suffer/be happy at the meanings you yourself attached.
Worse of all, you never had any choice.
Worse of all, you never had any choice.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Here.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Oh Lundi, you're such a~ <3
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Knows me. (This is a compliment)
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
They're always curious. They're usually very honest. They're not as rotten as adults are. They have dreams. They look at life in such a bright way.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
biased judgment.
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
last I checked, I'm straight...
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
Keirova_47 wrote...
React in anyway you feel is necessary, return the favor, lash out at me or you can be like Ojou-sama and give me no gratitude whatsoever. I'm much used to the latter"Um, i-it's not like I l-liked it or an-anything, okay!"
mibuchiha
Fakku Elder
god damn let someone else answer. no need to reiterate