being happy is not difficult but humans like to indulge in their own emotions. it's all in the state of the mind though
Originally posted by Yuki~!:Why is being happy so difficult?
no one said it was easy though..
emotions...
i hate this thing call emotions...
frowning use more muscle then smiling...
but doing nothing use 0 muscle...
Why have emotions?
Why feel sad?
Why feel happy?
Why feel anger?
Why feel jealous?
Isn't feeling nothing better?
It is then internal peace will come no?
Originally posted by popikachu:emotions...
i hate this thing call emotions...
frowning use more muscle then smiling...
but doing nothing use 0 muscle...
Why have emotions?
Why feel sad?
Why feel happy?
Why feel anger?
Why feel jealous?Isn't feeling nothing better?
It is then internal peace will come no?
Then we are no diff from animals and A.I.
I think animals also have feelings. Look at their reactions when Ah Meng died.
Originally posted by popikachu:emotions...
i hate this thing call emotions...
frowning use more muscle then smiling...
but doing nothing use 0 muscle...
Why have emotions?
Why feel sad?
Why feel happy?
Why feel anger?
Why feel jealous?Isn't feeling nothing better?
It is then internal peace will come no?
you should watch "The invasion" though then u will understand why we need emotions though
Originally posted by seotiblizzard:Then we are no diff from animals and A.I.
A.I is intelligents that is created...
Our int in by our on brain...
having feelings and emotions are tiring...
i rather not have them...
Originally posted by popikachu:A.I is intelligents that is created...
Our int in by our on brain...
having feelings and emotions are tiring...
i rather not have them...
be grateful for them because they are the reason that we can experience pain and experience joy and happiness.
imagine a kid who cannot feel pain though.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6379795/
Ashlyn is among a tiny number of people in the world known to have congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis, or CIPA — a rare genetic disorder that makes her unable to feel pain.
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The untreatable disease also makes Ashlyn incapable of sensing extreme temperatures — hot or cold — disabling her body’s ability to cool itself by sweating. Otherwise, her senses are normal.
Ashlyn can feel the texture of nickels and dimes she sorts into piles on her bedroom floor, the heft of the pink backpack she totes to school and the embrace of a hug. She feels hunger cravings for her favorite after-school snack, pickles and strawberry milk.
That’s because the genetic mutation that causes CIPA only disrupts the development of the small nerve fibers that carry sensations of pain, heat and cold to the brain.
“There are all kinds of different nerve cells that help us feel different sensations,” says Dr. Felicia Axelrod, a professor of pediatrics and neurology at New York University School of Medicine. “You can have one sense removed, just like you can lose your hearing but still smell things.”