Thoughts 1/17/2006 January 17, 2006
Posted by Kelsey Martineau in Philosophy, Sociology.Tags: Philosophy, Sociology
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We are complex beings are we not? But are we complex because we are made that way, or because we make ourselves that way. Think about that. Do most of the problems that we encounter every day, come back to being our own faults? So does this mean that we have the ability to stop our own issues? I probably just lost half of you there, but think about it. If we are the root cause of our own problems, would preventing that mindset and/or mentality cure our issues? I think so. I honestly believe that well over 80% of the problems we deal with are issues that we create, because when it comes down to it, we are all addicted to drama. Some people claim to be “simplistic” by nature, and “uncomplicated.” But give me a break; the very fact that one claims to be those two attributes is a form of complication some how or another.
We all claim we want everything simple. Even I have been guilty of that. We want to stop playing these “games” in relationships, or stop talking behind each others backs to friends about other friends, but we don’t. Just like stated, claiming that is just another form of complication. Some could even argue that there is a reason I am blogging about this, hoping one specific person would read it, due to issues that I have been going through lately with certain people. Although this isn’t the case, does that not prove my very point? It seems like, humans, have to have an explanation for everything. “Why did Kelsey write that blog, what was his motive?” And although I don’t have one at all, many of you may think I do. Think about it. I read one time that a sociological experiment was done, where a man stepped in an elevator, and looked at the other person in the elevator, and touched his ear and then made some type of signal with his hand. The person almost always acted confused towards it. It’s because we can’t take anything for granted. Everything, to us as humans, has to have a meaning, and a purpose. We can’t look at anything as new, as creative, as productive. It has to be routine. It has to be boring. Boring is to boring.
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