SoulWhisperer
Broken Artist Ā« ā¤ļøā𩹠»
- Nov 13, 2023
- 597
Sometimes I find myself pondering the definition of "evil"/"bad". But I wanna put a disclaimer that in my personal opinion "good" and "evil" are all concepts made by mankind and that no true good or true evil exist, the only thing that applies is whether or not we accept things as human race, socially.
I found myself asking myself "Am I a good/bad person?", and the answer was that I ultimately believe that I am a bad person. A bad person capable of good things, as many. But there's also this difference between assholes and bad people in general. There are some people that commit bad things voluntarily and some not, some are aware and some are not. I think being a bad person solidifies when you are both aware of your actions and not willing to change, in a way that produces harm. If you hurt someone or people and merely refuse to do anything about it, then it could be argued that being a "bad person" is more likely. Then there's also this "bad" that is more soft, doing things you know just "aren't the best", considering that many other people do worse.
Another firm belief of mine, even if I'm not exactly a religious person, is that, while I my interest in following doctrines and virtues for purely religious values, I found that of the designated so-called "7 sins" one specifically applies to humans in not a way directly tied to religion. Greed. I believe that we are all born with an innate greed that makes us always yearn for more and never be satisfied with what I have. I have a car, I want a better one. I got a better one, I want more. I make money, I want more money! This perpetual feeling of always setting yourself higher standards, merely because you fulfilled the steps below. But then there's also another side to this greed, another side of the coin. The one that not only makes you yearn for more, but that also makes you do anything for more, especially hurting people.
If you put a million bucks in a competition and allow people to do anything for it, without caring about laws and consequences, chances are that many people will do literally anything; even bending "personal values" (In this case can you truly call them such? If you are willing to forgo them simply because you're not threatened anymore by a punishment). Some people, example world leaders or the smallest % of rich folks that own most of wealth, they already have way more than the average human needs, yet I still think they are in pursuit of more and more. Some people are willing to go out of their way in job positions and corporate positions to push others under the bus for own benefit. Those two are the pungent sharp of my innate greed theory.
I believe that everyone has this things deep down in them, even atop of layers of presumed innocence, HOWEVER I also believe that one is able to rid themselves of this through iron will to change. I believe that the majority of people you find in this world are kind of assholes for a reason or another but I also believe that there are out there people that are genuinely good. People who would refuse to take advantage of others or let greed take over their decision-making and actions. It takes much and it takes long to override such thing and become people that genuinely want good. I think the discriminating factor here is intent and will. Whether or not, deep down, you truly care for others or not, and their suffering. (Of course though, everyone has a different life and different availabilities, everyone judges themselves personally)
Me personally, I think that I have a heart split. One that wants to love, one that wants to hate for all the shit in this world, and veins that surround it that are those of the innate greed. Letting go of certain things, certain things you hold onto as part of greed is necessary. It's a sacrifice, that you are willing to take or not take.
I never wanted true suffering of others, but all the harm I underwent definitely did not leave me unaffected. A suffering heart that tries to hold onto anything just to not fall, that is merely gasping for air. That however, is still possible to be defined "greedy" by my standards.
i explained this horribly, but i tried; little confused mind.
I found myself asking myself "Am I a good/bad person?", and the answer was that I ultimately believe that I am a bad person. A bad person capable of good things, as many. But there's also this difference between assholes and bad people in general. There are some people that commit bad things voluntarily and some not, some are aware and some are not. I think being a bad person solidifies when you are both aware of your actions and not willing to change, in a way that produces harm. If you hurt someone or people and merely refuse to do anything about it, then it could be argued that being a "bad person" is more likely. Then there's also this "bad" that is more soft, doing things you know just "aren't the best", considering that many other people do worse.
Another firm belief of mine, even if I'm not exactly a religious person, is that, while I my interest in following doctrines and virtues for purely religious values, I found that of the designated so-called "7 sins" one specifically applies to humans in not a way directly tied to religion. Greed. I believe that we are all born with an innate greed that makes us always yearn for more and never be satisfied with what I have. I have a car, I want a better one. I got a better one, I want more. I make money, I want more money! This perpetual feeling of always setting yourself higher standards, merely because you fulfilled the steps below. But then there's also another side to this greed, another side of the coin. The one that not only makes you yearn for more, but that also makes you do anything for more, especially hurting people.
If you put a million bucks in a competition and allow people to do anything for it, without caring about laws and consequences, chances are that many people will do literally anything; even bending "personal values" (In this case can you truly call them such? If you are willing to forgo them simply because you're not threatened anymore by a punishment). Some people, example world leaders or the smallest % of rich folks that own most of wealth, they already have way more than the average human needs, yet I still think they are in pursuit of more and more. Some people are willing to go out of their way in job positions and corporate positions to push others under the bus for own benefit. Those two are the pungent sharp of my innate greed theory.
I believe that everyone has this things deep down in them, even atop of layers of presumed innocence, HOWEVER I also believe that one is able to rid themselves of this through iron will to change. I believe that the majority of people you find in this world are kind of assholes for a reason or another but I also believe that there are out there people that are genuinely good. People who would refuse to take advantage of others or let greed take over their decision-making and actions. It takes much and it takes long to override such thing and become people that genuinely want good. I think the discriminating factor here is intent and will. Whether or not, deep down, you truly care for others or not, and their suffering. (Of course though, everyone has a different life and different availabilities, everyone judges themselves personally)
Me personally, I think that I have a heart split. One that wants to love, one that wants to hate for all the shit in this world, and veins that surround it that are those of the innate greed. Letting go of certain things, certain things you hold onto as part of greed is necessary. It's a sacrifice, that you are willing to take or not take.
I never wanted true suffering of others, but all the harm I underwent definitely did not leave me unaffected. A suffering heart that tries to hold onto anything just to not fall, that is merely gasping for air. That however, is still possible to be defined "greedy" by my standards.
i explained this horribly, but i tried; little confused mind.