Mmmmmmm bacon.Irridium said:I'd like to add my own:
Never cook bacon without a shirt on.
That's... somewhat true, I suppose. I am unique enough in a sense. But my global impact is essentially nil. I'm a grain of sand on the beach, if you get my drift. Just one of many. While I may be unique, my uniqueness is dulled a little by the sheer number of others.believer258 said:Because out of seven billion people there is only one Pandaman1911.Pandaman1911 said:-snip-
There are tons of ways in which people can be similar; this is part of how we make friends. But each person is different in some way or another.
Because not a single one of them is in the exact same place, doing the exact same thing, whilst being the exact same person. Sure we may all be 99.9998% the same, but then again, we have 98% similarity with chimps. that little 2% means a whole damn lot.Pandaman1911 said:But I agree on... some of them... kind of. I disagree that we're all unique. There's almost seven billion more of me, how the hell does that make me unique?
I do believe I can reply in the form of a question... one put to us by the great thinker and Collaborator Dr. Wallace Breen.believer258 said:Bill Gates is one of seven billion. So is Steve Jobs, so is Ken Levine, so is Roger Ebert, so is that fat guy from Valve, oh what's-his-(big)-face? Oh yeah, Gabe! (I just delayed HL2E3 for another day and brought the Steampocalypse closer to fruition, didn't I?). Silliness aside, my point is that all of those people have brought something to the world. If you want to be a name, then you can be. Put yourself down about being a grain of sand in a long beach, go ahead, but all you'll do then is hurt yourself.Pandaman1911 said:That's... somewhat true, I suppose. I am unique enough in a sense. But my global impact is essentially nil. I'm a grain of sand on the beach, if you get my drift. Just one of many. While I may be unique, my uniqueness is dulled a little by the sheer number of others.believer258 said:Because out of seven billion people there is only one Pandaman1911.Pandaman1911 said:-snip-
There are tons of ways in which people can be similar; this is part of how we make friends. But each person is different in some way or another.
There are plenty of things we, as a society, single out and critise despite it being relatively normal. Sex, drugs, risk tasking, pleasure seeking and sinning are all examples.Raven said:If everyone was a hypocrite we wouldn't single out hypocrisy as a behaviour... It'd be normal.
"Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!"believer258 said:No. No, human accomplishments are fated to live until we, as a species, disappear. We have learned languages, invented the wheel, written countless books, found out what the world is made of, sent men into space and onto the moon, developed machines that can process information very fast.
Humanity has done more than you're attributing to it. Humility is never, and has never been, a bad thing. It's great to have some humility - that makes one less of a prick. But long-lasting accomplishments do exist.
I really don't think so. I could get turned into a red smear on the road by a bus tomorrow, and it wouldn't make a damned bit of difference in the end. I appreciate your optimism and respect your opinion, but I'm inclined to disagree on that one.The Heik said:Because not a single one of them is in the exact same place, doing the exact same thing, whilst being the exact same person. Sure we may all be 99.9998% the same, but then again, we have 98% similarity with chimps. that little 2% means a whole damn lot.Pandaman1911 said:But I agree on... some of them... kind of. I disagree that we're all unique. There's almost seven billion more of me, how the hell does that make me unique?
And further food for thought. You may only be one person out of 7 billion, on 1 planet of 8, orbiting 1 star out of 400 million in 1 galaxy of trillions, and you know what?
You matter.
If you didn't exist, this universe wouldn't exist either. This is your universe, and even your most minuscule action can potentially shatter the cosmos.
Those are my personal favourite rules of life.
1) you are unique
2) you are important
And don't let anyone tell you different
Jamboxdotcom said:pretty good list, but i partially disagree with rule #1, because 75% of the huge f***-ups in my life are a direct result of me overthinking something. i understand the sentiment of that rule, and (obviously) i tend to apply it in my life, but there does come a time when you DO need to stop thinking and just go with it or accept it or whatever action (or inaction) the situation requires.
It's not that your direct actions will shape the cosmos, but rather the effects from your actions. If you were to get hit by a bus, the driver may try to repent, which may cause them to save a life, and that life saved might go on to invent a cure or create world peace. It's a long shot to be sure, but then again, all life on earth originally came form a few microscopic single-cell organisms, and that's some ridiculously big odds.Pandaman1911 said:I really don't think so. I could get turned into a red smear on the road by a bus tomorrow, and it wouldn't make a damned bit of difference in the end. I appreciate your optimism and respect your opinion, but I'm inclined to disagree on that one.The Heik said:Because not a single one of them is in the exact same place, doing the exact same thing, whilst being the exact same person. Sure we may all be 99.9998% the same, but then again, we have 98% similarity with chimps. that little 2% means a whole damn lot.Pandaman1911 said:But I agree on... some of them... kind of. I disagree that we're all unique. There's almost seven billion more of me, how the hell does that make me unique?
And further food for thought. You may only be one person out of 7 billion, on 1 planet of 8, orbiting 1 star out of 400 million in 1 galaxy of trillions, and you know what?
You matter.
If you didn't exist, this universe wouldn't exist either. This is your universe, and even your most minuscule action can potentially shatter the cosmos.
Those are my personal favourite rules of life.
1) you are unique
2) you are important
And don't let anyone tell you different
But I definitely prefer these.The Heik said:1) you are unique
2) you are important
sotagirlswag said:Wow. Thanks for your egocentric, bullshit critique. Your analogies don't compare to the merit and deep thought of this writing. Sorry you don't have the capacity to think any other way than narrow-minded and unimaginative. I'm glad you wasted all your precious time typing this from an iphone.
Raven said:27. Don't take anything, even this, too seriously.
especially this list