Very profound question but one that I have no answer for.It depends what come first, the chicken or the egg! Lol
Very profound question but one that I have no answer for.It depends what come first, the chicken or the egg! Lol
The US Army used to have run a commercial on TV "Be, all that you can be, find your future in the Army". From my own personal experience I found that slogan to be true.Just because you're not doing all you could be doing doesn't mean you are negligent. "You're not being all you could be" is neither a sin nor a crime, and sometimes it is really not worth it. A lot of people think they would be happy if they had just a little bit more, or if they could do something they were not doing. And I know a lot of people who are really stressed out because they felt they were never enough.
Being able to weigh cost versus benefit is an essential ability when you are deciding how far up the ladder you will climb. And it's usually possible to climb far enough to be really unhappy.
I got curious about why people in fast food restaurants habitually clean up after themselves. I googled "How did fast food get customers to clean up" and the first two results were the following articles:
"Top Reasons Why Fastfood (sic) Customers Should Clean Up"
"Why You Should Stop Bussing Your Own Table"
This just proves what I have already suspected: On the internet you can find a viewpoint and an article to back up anything you want to believe. If you want to believe chocolate causes cancer, or all music is inherently evil, or vacuum cleaners will one day rule the world, you can find something online to back you up. Confirmation bias has never been so easy (and I can prove it with three articles I found online.)
Love is... knowing if you put the toilet paper on the roller the wrong way, your wife will start doing it herself, but putting it on the righth way because you know that is what she likes.