MTBDEM
MTBDEM t1_iz91exi wrote
Reply to comment by LoneWolf_McQuade in Philosopher José Antonio Marina: 'The fact that happiness has become fashionable is catastrophic' by FDuquesne
I think the word "wish" is a bit loaded in my head which is why I struggled with that proverb. You can't "wish" for something to happen "as is" - Isn't that the opposite of the point of the wish? If I buy a lottery ticket, "I wish I win it" rather than proactively "wish the things happen the way they happen" - because they will "always happen the way they happen" irregardless of whether I wish for it or not. Now not being dissapointed by the outcome and our relationship with reality is where I think it is, but the word Wish just doesn't resonate with me.
I get what you and /u/hxub are saying, it's more of a "Dissapointed wishes are seeds for grudges" I guess
MTBDEM t1_iz8zpe4 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Philosopher José Antonio Marina: 'The fact that happiness has become fashionable is catastrophic' by FDuquesne
>“Don’t seek for everything to happen as you wish it would, but rather wish that everything happens as it actually will—then your life will flow well.”
What's the difference between wishin for it to happen as I want it to, and wishing for it to actually happen? I'm struggling with this quote
MTBDEM t1_izfibjk wrote
Reply to comment by ammonium_bot in Philosopher José Antonio Marina: 'The fact that happiness has become fashionable is catastrophic' by FDuquesne
Whatchu mean it's not a word