(http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/13/booming/a-car-to-give-a-sandy-survivor-with-a-need.html?_r=0)
My Old Toyota Sputtered. Then Came the Storm.
By PAULA SPAN
Published: November 13, 2012
Published: November 13, 2012
This
article talks about a person who was generous enough to give away her Toyota
truck to a family who had lost all that they had. That truck meant so much to
her she had it for years and she couldn’t come to the conclusion if she should
sell it or not! So don’t you think that if everything didn’t happen for a
reason she wouldn’t have sold the Toyota truck before the accident happened to
the poor family? There is a reason why time made her wait because, she would
have had the option to give the truck to the family and have they paid in payments
with time. That should have gave her the idea of why she didn’t sell it before.
But she still says in her article she doesn’t believe in the “everything
happens for a reason” saying. She thinks that it was just the time and place
for it. Although we have different
opinions it makes me happy that there could be generous people like her out
there, because now a days people can be quiet selfish all they think about is
themselves and have no sense of humor, or a kind heart.
“That saying that everything happens for a reason? I’ve never bought it.
It’s painfully clear that some things — natural disasters, freak accidents,
Mariano Rivera tearing up his knee in May — happen for no reason at all. Life
is random.”
But is life truly random? Here is what she also says about life being random.
"I've spent a lot of time reading and reflecting on many great philosophies
and religions, many of which attempt, in some degree to address the question of
purpose. What are we here for? Where is this all headed? Do I have a destiny
and am I fulfilling it? A large part of the debate focuses on how much of the
direction of life is what it is, without any input from us, we're just
following the plan we were born to carry out, how much of it is more a general
schema, with our free will determining variances in the carrying out of that
general plan, and how much is completely random and arbitrary. Sometimes, after
all of this reflection, I feel no closer to understanding these fundamental
questions than I did when I started. I've often wished I were a simpler person
who could more easily accept and surrender to the unpredictability of events. I
know intuitively that true answers are found within everything else is just a series of external
factoids - pieces of information and advice designed to help us access that
innate wisdom given to us at birth, with which we're supposed to nurture and
grow as we travel along this oddly random path. Life is indeed difficult,
partly because of the real difficulties we must overcome in order to survive,
and partly because of our own innate desire to always do better, to overcome
new challenges, to self-actualize. Happiness is experienced largely in striving
towards a goal, not in having attained things, because our nature is always to
want to go on to the next endeavor".
We humans are random as well, we do things that we shouldn’t and then
complain because it doesn’t work the way we want it to, but it’s our entire
fault at the end! We just have to get used to the fact that life is tough and
it all depends on how we react to our problems, because that will make us the
better person at the end! Have fun it’s
okay to be random J
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