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« One of the greatest dialogsEmotional cancer »

Every dog, has his day...

  • By: Qwaider

  • On:Sunday, May 06, 2007 10:02:20 AM
  • In:Thoughts
  • Viewed: (4580) times

    • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
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    Rated 4.5/5 stars (148 votes cast) Thanks for your vote!

    One of the interesting things in this life is how some people seem to attribute things to completely unrelated things. Like for example, how someone explains their success in something is due to being the better person. Although on the surface it might seam true. But there will always be those specific qualities that attribute to a person's success. From a different perspective, it might his luck, sweet talk, apple polishing, or genuine talent that is seldom appreciated by the person himself.

    I've noticed that success in a similar group of people is defined by the consistent least common denominator. People who do what others don't, and they do it all the time. That would be a great reason for personal success. Admirable and worthy. But that's not always the case.

    Many people succeed because of their extracurricular talents. From sucking-up to back-stabbing, some think all is fair in office wars. Any opportunistic person would see that as completely legitimate.

    Then some of these people start blabbering about how amazing their achievement was and then start attributing it to just about anything in the world. From bragging about unrelated experience, to boasting non-existent hard work, while completely leaving the matters of sucking-up out of the picture

    This leads to my next point which always puzzled me when people start proclaiming, or considering themselves better than others because they pray more for example. Or give more to charity. As if religious and charitable work is a scale of preference.

    Education helps people gather knowledge. Work helps people gain experience. money allows people to collect wealth. A nice-pretty wife would make life easier, and so on. None of these makes anyone better than anyone else. Nor does family, tribe, color, ethnicity, gender or where you live. On the same note it doesn't make you worse either

    Therefore, attributing success ty do being the better person is just like attributing it to luck. Which translates in short to someone admitting that they don't even know why they deserve such a success. If anything, it's least flattering to the person's hard work IF any

    Anyone who thinks they achieved such success without really earning it is just the dog, having his day, so enjoy the bone.

    Other Memories Documented on May 06
    • 42..
    • by: Qwaider.
    • In: 2008
    • Viewed: (3933) times
    « One of the greatest dialogsEmotional cancer »

    Memories....

    lol are you sure about  "having a  nice wife would make life easier"
    It has been scientifically proven through research and statistics that married men live longer, that includes Trophy wives.
    So the old Arabic saying a wife that prolongs your life, couldn't have been more true.
    i hear u, and u know why? partly because we are taught when we are kids that u gotta be a doctor or bash mohandes, that makes u better, erfa3 rasna lafog goddam el... jeeran! so we grow up thinking that those few categories are what makes us better, not success in itself, ya3ni 3amel el tandeefat could as well be succesful in his job which makes him BETTER than ra2ees el wizara that failed on his level to do the job he was expected to do, bass our reward system itself does not account for those success levels! too bad
    Egos need to be fed, but it is when they are over-fed you get the to the dog status:)
    You too can have your Memories Documented

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