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Monday, October 17, 2016

Our Nature

Destined to revert to the basic notions that drive us, are we really evolving? 
Destined to find obstacles surpassed by our ancestors with varying degrees of similarity, yet equal in the measure of effort that must be granted to them, we fail due to our lack of attention to the former in its native form: a whisper, a sentiment, a lament, a yell, and sometimes just a talking-to. We derive not the intended meaning, but the understood meaning based on the desires that drive us, based on the moment's feeling whether they are of ire or felicity. We are doomed to submit our failures to the next generation by mere failure to comprehend that the delivery of that message was devoid of understanding, an understanding that carries with it the essence of the individual's current state of affairs, mood, and a semblance of their attitude toward the current situation. The enabling factor not being the message in itself, rather the desire or necessity to listen which beget a strange behavior or insolence and restitution upon the listener to contrive ways in which to ignore the present and through seldom characteristics drawn from the event react.
I am no longer in a position to clearly object to any notions of agreement or the opposite, nor through the use of marionette's limbs or any other device construct a bridge that can in any manner suffice as the tool which can drive meaning or from which it could be derived.
It is as if our view is a concave whole where everything falls just half right, and the other half is filled with the present we avoid to acknowledge as happening simultaneous to our endeavors.
I feel as if the meaning of life is not in the ever perplexing secrets we wish to unravel in nature, space, and the unknown, but rather in investing oneself in living, letting live, and through the use of knowledge gathering and sharing as much as we can; it is often that it is not those we wish listened that receive an intended message, but the message helps others in kind. The perpetual nature of life is not in that we live and die, but that there are many things we cannot deny that are more than just our nature.

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