Please order a psychedelic cocktail from your waiter. 
Here are the 5 last posts from the previous social thread (which was archived):

Here are the 5 last posts from the previous social thread (which was archived):
When people say "try to get something out of life" to me it implies that they think there is nothing there to begin with, when instead you should be aazed by the fact that there is life, and be amazed at all life, and be in awe that this life, even this planet we stand on are all born of the same parents: massive stars that in their death created the elements and atoms that comprise everything we see.
We should be humbled by the fact that we are a temporary organization of these atoms that have been made self aware and cherish that before we have to return these borrowed atoms to the earth.
^Eh, I'm not big on that view. I mean yeah I'm into it as far as the inherent value of human life regardless of societal "accomplishments," but when you've been a NEET for 20%+ of your life, you'll start buying into the idea that ya need to try to get something out of your life too.
love it.it's nice to be able to log onto Bluelight on some random Wednesday at 2 in the morning, and sure as day, there's ol' Never, poised to lend us his pithy purple-colored prose.
yes, this very much vibes with what I'm getting at. instead of being grateful and appreciative of what nature has given us, we demand more. haha!
i also totally understand this attitude. but, the key is to see that you always will win. hell, whatever miserable body that you happen to be puppeteering right now might die cold and alone, but you're not that body. you're a flame that can't be snuffed, eternal. all of your miserable failures are just scuffs and burns on the hands of the Immortal Torch Juggler, a.k.a. Tao. no big deal, a good bargain for all of the dazzling lights and happy sprites.
Still feeling the same more or less!Happy birthday siltentrroller, make 'er a good un, bud!
's!
I've read that Ken Kesey was fond of that little diddy.
This I can vibe with.
I've grown away from the Existentialist and Eastern strains of thought of my younger years, towards the Abrahamic perspective. There's too much death and pain the world for me to consider life anything but serious.
Now to contradict what I just said, has anyone here read the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam? I'm a big fan.