revelations

Aug 15, 2003 11:13

alter states of consciousness and return with prometheus' gift ( Read more... )

Leave a comment

Comments 7

glittalogik August 14 2003, 18:19:28 UTC
interesting...but how can you reconcile this with the knowledge that Kompressor does not dance?

*serious look*

...*collapses into giggles*

Reply

anothertwilight August 14 2003, 18:34:24 UTC
... with love

*attempts to look modest and devout. fails. settles for not looking too smug*

Reply

hawk_eye August 14 2003, 18:56:29 UTC
But if he doesn't dance, which is as internal a process of self awareness as I can think of, how can Kompressor really love?

Reply

chuppa August 14 2003, 19:20:13 UTC
Kompressor is just afraid to dance..
He thinks people will ridicule him.

Its all fear driven.

Reply


artificeone August 14 2003, 19:37:56 UTC
even in understanding fear can exist. Knowledge and reason lead to understanding, yet in many situations a knowledgable person will feel a healthy fear of the actions they are about to undertake. To err is human, and i think most people recognise this - however subconciously that may be - and the fear leads to stress. Stress pulls at our minds as it demands "more power scottie!". Willpower is what throws us off the fence, into either success or failure. Does the fear galvanize us, or tear apart our fragile egos. Fear is what drives some people foward, while others crumble.
I'd also like to add that i see fear more as an opposite of sex, than love(yeah, i'm still one for the whole love-hate thing). Mirror image like, they drive us towards our goals or away from them, in opposite directions to each other.
Still a bit sick, so i can't be certain this all makes sense, or that i'm explaining it well from my head. I'm not really disagreeing either, but my mind is enjoying the work. :)

Reply

anothertwilight August 14 2003, 23:20:12 UTC
even in understanding fear can exist

I am not certain of it, but I am going to argue the negative ans see where it leads.

a knowledgable person will feel a healthy fear of the actions they are about to undertakeand I would say that they no longer fear what they are doing (which they know) but rather the unknown potential or outcome ( ... )

Reply

artificeone August 17 2003, 04:30:26 UTC
i've gotta agree with that.
My final sentence sums it all up. I was really worked over on this "medication" and i'm not even sure why i wrote all of that. but still, i have to agree with the more complicated break down. It seems to me that the fear i was talking about, was more specifically a fear of failure, but now i just think that i have issues.
*bows*

Reply


Leave a comment

Up