
Makko
Iä!
- Jan 17, 2021
- 2,430
I see a pesistent tendency, not just here but generally in despondent people, to be able to pinpoint a single source for all the evils in their lives.
If only I had money, everything would have been fine.
If only I had romance, everything would have been fine.
If only I had wise parents, everything would have been fine.
If only I had something to do, everything would have been fine.
If only I had opportunities, everything would have been fine.
If only I had peace of mind, everything would have been fine.
If only I didn't have this addiction or disease, everything would have been fine.
Is this actually how it works? I was skeptical at first, but over time I do notice that if they someone gain the one thing they seem to be missing, they stop complaining. There's obviously truth to this. This amazing ability to identify The One Problem runs contrary to the general inadequacy of human self-analysis.
Why can't I do it, then? Where is my One Problem? Where is the dragon that I have to slay to put out this fire? I can't see it. Everything that I want and can name, I have. There's something that I need to have that cannot be named. I feel like a crayon stick figure trying to rise up from the paper and reach towards the sky. Whatever it is I want but don't have is in a dimension as inaccessible to me as the 3D world is to the stick figure. I can infer that it exists, but I can't begin to even imagine what it is, and I can never go there and experience it.
What is it the One Thing you don't have?
If only I had money, everything would have been fine.
If only I had romance, everything would have been fine.
If only I had wise parents, everything would have been fine.
If only I had something to do, everything would have been fine.
If only I had opportunities, everything would have been fine.
If only I had peace of mind, everything would have been fine.
If only I didn't have this addiction or disease, everything would have been fine.
Is this actually how it works? I was skeptical at first, but over time I do notice that if they someone gain the one thing they seem to be missing, they stop complaining. There's obviously truth to this. This amazing ability to identify The One Problem runs contrary to the general inadequacy of human self-analysis.
Why can't I do it, then? Where is my One Problem? Where is the dragon that I have to slay to put out this fire? I can't see it. Everything that I want and can name, I have. There's something that I need to have that cannot be named. I feel like a crayon stick figure trying to rise up from the paper and reach towards the sky. Whatever it is I want but don't have is in a dimension as inaccessible to me as the 3D world is to the stick figure. I can infer that it exists, but I can't begin to even imagine what it is, and I can never go there and experience it.
What is it the One Thing you don't have?