Interestingly enough there is some evidence--or at least assertions by people who've studied this sort of thing--that doing this sort of problem solving ahead of time tends to reduce the paralysis.
When you get on a plane, go into a restaurant, when you're wandering down the street or when you go someplace new think about a few common emergencies and just think about how you might respond to them.
Pain is good, it tells you you're still alive.
All in all though, I'd rather have the alive w/out the pain. At least as far as I know.
Dunno mate, I could name a few US Presidents and non-US leaders.
It is entirely possible that I might be confused.
I read "Life" to be a reference to a game played while immersed in, and as an escape from Real Life(tm), and this confusion comes from the term "microtransation", which is rather hard-linked in my skull to "micropayments", aka "the millicent ghetto"
In the version of Real Life I am playing microtransations don't get you out of much of anything worth getting into in the first place.
It just makes the game more realistic. After all, IRL you can almost always pay your way out of a situation if you have the coin and the connections.
What good does getting mad do? What does it accomplish?
Asks the guy who routinely gets mad at a video game that was made for WIndows 95.
No.
It's an honest assessment of the state of the world.
I'm not agreeing with that position, I'm just saying that there are folks who would prefer an efficient program that yielded the wrong results if it benefited them, and would engage in all manner of philosophicalish circumlocutions to justify it to themselves.
That very much depends on who benefits from those wrong results.
Not always from some ancient war.
That's so...typewriter.
Thanks.
I don't consider it, I assume it.
But "dumb" and "ignorant" are not points on a line, they are relative positions.
To quote this bloke at a climbing gym I used to frequent "We all suck at our own level".
Is ruthlessness necessarily unethical in a military leader?
Sometimes compassion is a sharp sword.
I'm sigquoting that if you don't mind.
Not that that means anything anymore, but I'm old school that way.
I think that both you and Mr. Franklin are correct.
To wreak great changes one must stay focused and work diligently on one's goal. One needn't eliminate all pleasures from life, but I think you'll find that very, very few people can have a serious hobby and a world changing vocation.
Most of us of "tolerable" abilities cannot maintain the kind of focus and purity of dedication required. That is why the world changes as little as it does. If everyone, as an example who was to the right of center on the IQ curve could make great changes etc., then ...
If you're a football (American, not Eurasian) coach you're routinely going to frame your aphorisms in terms of battles, or "fights" as you put it.
Head is an achin' and knees are abraded
Plates in my neck and stitches updated
Toes are a cracking and Tendons inflamed
These are a few of my favorite pains
But yes, the author of those books is mostly correct, there's some kinds of pain that serve as a useful warning function. Those are good and we should be grateful.
Others are artifacts of historical stupidity. I've learned those lessons and reminding me of them is useless.