Monday, March 24, 2014
Musing
In the blur that is modern life, you may find
yourself reading things that you do not believe. A good example is the
statement “and they lived happily ever after” which encompasses the pleasant
feelings enjoyed by unrealistic and overly idealistic individuals after some
great evil had recently been vanquished. The simple reason that people
shouldn’t believe such a statement is that it is an unrealistic assessment of
life. When an artist creates a piece of art, the motive is simple. The artist
is trying to communicate how they perceive the world. And when a writer writes
writing, they are doing the same thing. So it goes to show that a person
writing the statement “And they lived happily ever” after is communicating how
they see life. But if a person is writing the statement directly above this
sentence incase you need to refer back to it, it means that they see the world
as a place where evil can be perinatal vanquished, and idealistic, happy people
can enjoy pure pleasant, and wholesome gratification for the foreseeable
future. The people who write such statements are probably the sorts of people
who pull their hair back into stubby pigtails with pink rubber bands and then
giggle loudly at sports events. Because those are the sorts of people with
unrealistic opinions on life that are pr
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