ColdLightOfDay
Serge’s alt.
★★★★★
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2018
- Posts
- 5,717
Due to our evolutionary programming, our default perception of ‘strength’ is actually a diametric inversion of what it actually takes to be ‘strong’ and ‘resilient’ as a man.
Most normies consider someone like Dwayne Johnson to be a tough and resilient guy, simply because he looks like he could fight a bunch of people single handedly. I do not understand why, it’d be totally easy for any of us to step into his shoes and by default be considered a ’tough person‘ without any applied effort. To me a ‘tough person’ is someone like Stephen Hawking, someone who had a truly unenviable life yet continued to find the strength to carry on and make the most of it. Being a born as a Chad is a pampered privilege like being born with the silver spoon in your mouth, mentally they are not stronger, they are merely born into a more cushy position in a previously established hierarchy and thus project more ‘strength’ as a result of having faced far less adversity.
My perception of what makes a ‘strong person’ has become diametrically inverted as a result of becoming blackpilled. I have far more respect for those I pass in the street who are shorter and uglier than me because they have had to deal with more adversity relative to myself - this is the logical way of viewing things - Instead society views these people as weak and it’s a totally insane, a caveman mentality persisting within an ‘advanced’ civilisation built on the back of a perseverance these traits have no part in. The sheer hypocrisy of it is nauseating.
People like @chudur-budur are the strongest, yet he complains the least, and then you have those like @mylifeistrash who whine the most despite having been born into far more privilege than anyone else here, whilst subtly conveying to those who haven’t that they are pathetic merely because this hypocritical society perceives them to be so. It’s laughable, I know who is the stronger of those two and the fact it isn’t obvious to everyone is a testament to the stupidity of the society we live in, and to the stupidity of those here who buy into its narrative (like the latter aforementioned person does).
Most normies consider someone like Dwayne Johnson to be a tough and resilient guy, simply because he looks like he could fight a bunch of people single handedly. I do not understand why, it’d be totally easy for any of us to step into his shoes and by default be considered a ’tough person‘ without any applied effort. To me a ‘tough person’ is someone like Stephen Hawking, someone who had a truly unenviable life yet continued to find the strength to carry on and make the most of it. Being a born as a Chad is a pampered privilege like being born with the silver spoon in your mouth, mentally they are not stronger, they are merely born into a more cushy position in a previously established hierarchy and thus project more ‘strength’ as a result of having faced far less adversity.
My perception of what makes a ‘strong person’ has become diametrically inverted as a result of becoming blackpilled. I have far more respect for those I pass in the street who are shorter and uglier than me because they have had to deal with more adversity relative to myself - this is the logical way of viewing things - Instead society views these people as weak and it’s a totally insane, a caveman mentality persisting within an ‘advanced’ civilisation built on the back of a perseverance these traits have no part in. The sheer hypocrisy of it is nauseating.
People like @chudur-budur are the strongest, yet he complains the least, and then you have those like @mylifeistrash who whine the most despite having been born into far more privilege than anyone else here, whilst subtly conveying to those who haven’t that they are pathetic merely because this hypocritical society perceives them to be so. It’s laughable, I know who is the stronger of those two and the fact it isn’t obvious to everyone is a testament to the stupidity of the society we live in, and to the stupidity of those here who buy into its narrative (like the latter aforementioned person does).