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- Seen Jan 4, 2013
way too often i hear kids my age fabricating this background of "struggle" for themselves and comparing their over-exaggerated situations with other kids, going back and forth like life is some sort of misery contest.
despite having experienced some things in my own life that people like those in the above conversation would morph into something horribly traumatic, i can't find much to complain about. the truth is, while some kids are really in tough situations, a lot of people try to make their lives out to be far worse than they actually have it. why do you think that is? why don't privileged young people realize the very fortunate conditions they're living in and appreciate the opportunities they have? the only theory i can think of that explains how unhappiness is something one would strut around is the idea that a well-developed character is defined by experiencing and overcoming adversity...which is a rather distorted way of viewing things, but perhaps that's how some kids want to be perceived because of that subconscious notion. what do you think?
despite having experienced some things in my own life that people like those in the above conversation would morph into something horribly traumatic, i can't find much to complain about. the truth is, while some kids are really in tough situations, a lot of people try to make their lives out to be far worse than they actually have it. why do you think that is? why don't privileged young people realize the very fortunate conditions they're living in and appreciate the opportunities they have? the only theory i can think of that explains how unhappiness is something one would strut around is the idea that a well-developed character is defined by experiencing and overcoming adversity...which is a rather distorted way of viewing things, but perhaps that's how some kids want to be perceived because of that subconscious notion. what do you think?
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