Welcome back
Now we are going to discuss something which is very common topic that is we do good but we not get good.
Five words to take you into a dense maze of ideas philosophical, psychological and theological. Where to start? What suffering looks or feels like is probably one of the most subjective notions we can ponder. Even the way we usually categorise suffering – “physical” or “mental” – is blurry, because rarely does one come without the other. Our minds hurt when our bodies hurt, and vice versa.
If we put aside the “good” or “bad” ranking – for now – and ask why any person suffers, we can start at the beginning: when our body, pulled apart from the one we grew inside, is suspended in the world on its own for the first time. Birth.
In the book The Trauma of Birth (1924), the psychoanalyst Otto Rank – one of Freud’s closest colleagues – wrote that all human beings suffer trauma by virtue of being born. Expanding on Freud’s theories from the beginning of the 1900s, when he famously called birth “the first experience of anxiety, and thus the source and prototype of the affect of anxiety”, Rank believed the physical event of being born to be not only the first anxiety a person knows, but also the blueprint of all anxiety experienced over the arc of their life.
Many of us say that it is right some of you say no it is wrong because we see many people that are not good but then also they get good in there life. Listen carefully the people who tell this he/she see at a short time period of time.
Actually what happens that if you see that people from starting of there life to end you released that no what they do they get the same thing.
So what is the main thing is there is that do good give your 100% by the time you also get 100% from that work.
I will post part 2 of this same topic in few days so always connect with us.
And also motivate and read inspired thought, follow them you will be success have some passion in yourself.
Always follow your passion do smart work, you are the next one who is going to change this world.
Death penalty states say no: “eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot” (Exodus 21:24). Countries such as Norway, with its prisons focusing on humanity, say yes (and also happen to have some of the lowest re-offending rates in Europe). Whether we can change people – and therefore limit further unnecessary human suffering in society – by power is an ongoing debate. There is no greater act of power than one human being ending another’s life. For some victims of crime, their suffering may be lessened by a perpetrator’s death. For others, a sense of justice – and therefore a reduction in suffering – comes from an offender being in prison and losing their freedom. In modern neuroscience, the concept of “evil” is a bit old-hat. Within the brain’s limbic system is an almond-shaped cluster of nuclei involved in processing our fears and pleasures. In fMRI scans (measuring brain activity by changes associated with blood flow), murderers and other violent criminals have been shown to have amygdalae that aren’t functioning properly. A recent study found that those with markers of “limbic neural maldevelopment” have “significantly higher levels of antisocial personality, psychopathy, arrests and convictions compared with controls”.
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So nice
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