RE: I'd Like to Take This Moment to Apologize For My Face

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I touched base with Paul today and he mentioned how great it was to see you. I didn't remember seeing him in the comment section, so here I am, realizing that the other post was not the only one you made recently- and holy shit man, what a fantastic post I almost missed!

My brother and I were talking about this yesterday, this meaning the underlying message in this brilliant stream of consciousness that I just read. My conclusion was, I don't like extremes, not in weather, not in religion, not in politics, not in anything. I don't like this whole If you think this, you must think this- because that's just not at all true for me. Sometimes I pick sides, but it's on my terms for my reasons and no one told me to. Most times I look at all sides and see things I agree with or disagree with in all of them.

Fuck these boxes that people keep making for others to live in, I don't fit in them and never will.



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(Edited)

The whole thing isn't the easiest to navigate. Never was. An excellent case study developed though throughout the chaos that was that dude's episode, and I learned a lot more. I'm not sure if you tuned into the entire shit-show along with the spinoffs, but I did. People will intentionally disconnect and allow themselves to get blindsided for a shot at belonging.

I've always said I never felt like I belong. That's a good thing. It means I'm not owned. Others see it as being an outcast, or cast out. They tend to struggle in life but since there's a group (groupthink) allowing the square peg to fit in the round hole, making the game easy, they're blind to the struggles they face; tricked into thinking they're winning in numbers. But really they're just spinning their tires and rejecting a push simply because they've already made up their mind the help doesn't know how to push the right way, beforehand.

It's also a gimmick and breaking character could spell disaster; friendships, community, market, money, security, comfort; gone.

The aforementioned potential fear of loss is typically what shackles a cult member to the floor with invisible chains; that's why they rarely leave on their own even while things around them are taking a turn for the worse or not making any sense. Plus there's always someone there to remind them everything will be alright.

That part in italics I wrote here.

And sorry for all the edits. I'm baked and you got me thinking at the same time.

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