Of course you also have to work at achieving those things in the first place--employment/a career, friendships, romantic relationships, etc. You can't expect them to just fall into your lap. — Terrapin Station
Again, this requires some effort on your part. — Terrapin Station
And so why is the struggle to achieve career, friendships, romantic relationships.. worth the struggle? — schopenhauer1
Why does simply trying to say "work harder" become a remediation of the problems I brought up? — schopenhauer1
First, it doesn't have to be a struggle. Looking at it that way is already entering with an attitude that probably won't be beneficial. — Terrapin Station
Of course you also have to work at achieving those things in the first place--employment/a career, friendships, romantic relationships, etc. You can't expect them to just fall into your lap. — Terrapin Station
You won't necessarily feel that they are worth the "struggle" once you have them and compare that to your other options. But most people who have them, and especially those who do accept them for what they are rather than assessing them on some narrow, preconceived notion of what they should be, do feel that way about them compared to their other options. Of course, if you don't have those things in your life and you're perfectly content with that, then there's no need to worry about them so that you're even wondering about whether, and in what contexts, they might offer something to you. — Terrapin Station
Also, if what I'm saying is just "repeating truisms" then there can hardly be grounds for disagreeing with me. We should all hope to say things that are true, and truth isn't correlated with novelty. — Terrapin Station
Understanding posts often requires some effort, too, by the way. A large part of my point is that good relationships aren't about the details of the relationship. They're about how you look at them, your attitude towards them, and whether you're making any effort towards them or your attitude towards them. — Terrapin Station
Maybe you'd describe anything that you have to put any effort into, where it doesn't just fall into you all as a "struggle," but I wouldn't. — Terrapin Station
What does that have to do with whether a characterization counts as a "struggle"? — Terrapin Station
You said that what I described was a struggle, right? — Terrapin Station
(Re "trolling," I define that as someone (a) saying things that they don't believe, where (b) they're not doing so for comedic purposes, and (c) the motivation is primarily to get other people upset/worked up. I suppose you define it differently though.) — Terrapin Station
You can't have some narrow preconception of what those things should be like — Terrapin Station
and then effectively trash what you've got just because it doesn't closely resemble your preconception. — Terrapin Station
without shifting to a bad attitude about that stuff. Again, this requires some effort on your part. — Terrapin Station
How can something that is unequally distributed and has the potential to be a source of even more suffering in the short or long run be a reason for embracing life or providing new life to other individuals (i.e. reason for procreation), or being in any way a reason for having a positive outlook in regards to the lot of the human experience? — schopenhauer1
So if there are ten apple trees in your orchard and three of them have sour or rotting apples for whatever reason, you don't harvest the other seven? If we do nothing that has the potential to hurt us or where success is not guaranteed we do nothing at all. All good is unevenly distributed. That's the very nature of the Universe. You can elect to have nothing to do with it and die of starvation (cutting your nose off to spite your face) or embrace whatever good there is to be found in it and live. — Barry Etheridge
You're looking for anti-natalist support or something like that? <puzzled> — Terrapin Station
At any rate, it's obviously a matter of how someone is looking at things, how they're assessing them, etc.--that's all that harm, suffering, and so on are in the first place. — Terrapin Station
And for most folks, there's a degree of malleability in how they look at things. They don't HAVE to look at things in a negative way. They can have positive attitudes, they can enjoy things for what they are, etc. — Terrapin Station
If you're that miserable, get counseling. Except for extreme situations, you can be helped and you don't have to be so miserable. — Terrapin Station
This topic is a break off from a discussion in the technology thread involving Bitter Crank. (I thought it worthy of its own topic)
Just like "good work", "good relationships" are not guarantee in life.. Oddly enough, while relationships, and specifically good intimate relationships are on the top of people's lists of examples of what makes life meaningful, it is among the the least guaranteed and most fickle of phenomena we encounter. — schopenhauer1
How everyone else who can't paint to save their lives are supposed to live is beyond me. — darthbarracuda
s. The Appalachian Mountains were once as rugged as the Rockies. — Bitter Crank
most of them are good. — Bitter Crank
I think you undermine your case by stapling those two issues together.How can something that is unequally distributed and has the potential to be a source of even more suffering in the short or long run be a reason for
(1) embracing life or
(2) providing new life to other individuals (i.e. reason for procreation)
[numerals added by andrewk] — schopenhauer1
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