The Uncomfortable Truth of Life - 6 Paradoxical Life Lessons That Will Set You Free

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  • čas přidán 2. 11. 2020
  • We live in a confusing world.
    A world that is constantly trying to influence and indoctrinate us.
    We're bombarded with sweet fairy tales, deceptive images and attractive lies,
    These fairy tales and lies often keep us hooked.
    Do you know why?
    Because ultimately, they're meant to enslave us.
    But, no matter what we think of these fairy tales on the surface level,
    deep down, many of us feel the need to find the truth about things.
    Truths that will truly help us achieve our goals,
    truths that will make us successful and happy.
    And truths that will ultimately set us free from our failures, burdens and insecurities.
    This video explains some of these paradoxical yet extremely valid life lessons.
    Don't forget to smash the like button if you enjoyed this video, and Subscribe to stay updated on my upcoming content.
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    DD Groove by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
    Artist: incompetech.com/"
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Komentáře • 12

  • @QuietlyMagnetic
    @QuietlyMagnetic Před 3 lety +11

    "The older you get, the more you understand how your conscience works. The biggest and only critic lives in your perception of people's perception of you rather than people's perception of you.”

  • @WisdomWealth77
    @WisdomWealth77 Před 3 lety +6

    Better to be hurt by the truth than to be comforted with a lie.

  • @ahmadmhamadzahir8805
    @ahmadmhamadzahir8805 Před 3 lety +1

    Love your work

  • @codyenders3016
    @codyenders3016 Před 3 lety +1

    Another great video!

  • @kaotopmemes7320
    @kaotopmemes7320 Před 3 lety +1

    It is a Paraiba novel published in 1936. This novel is part of the sugar cane cycle of José Lins do Rego. The writer from Paraíba denounces the decadence of rural patriarchalism in this part of the country, and the arrival of the industrial revolution in the countryside, with the plants replacing the old mills. This novel is the continuation of the previous novel Moleque Ricardo. After being involved in workers' strikes in the capital of Pernambuco, Ricardo is arrested on Fernando de Noronha Island. Ricardo even had a sexual relationship with a fellow prisoner, Manuel (a very interesting and moving question in the book). But Ricardo is released and realizing that the city of Recife was already foreign to him, he decides after years to return to his homeland, Paraíba. When he gets there, he sees that nothing is the same: Carlos de Mello, Colonel Zé Paulino's grandson, could not endure the war over lands with other powerful ones (this is told in the novel Banguê), sells the mill to his uncle Juca, flees to Minas Gerais. Juca turns Engenho Santa Rosa into Usina Santa Fé. That world of engenhos is lagging behind. Ricardo is invited to work at the plant's warehouse. Juca invests in the Plant, with all the latest machinery, and his family spends their holidays in Cabedelo, Praia do Poço, Praia Formosa ... those regions of the city of Cabedelo. José Lins do Rego also deals with existential issues: sadness, longing, nostalgia, loneliness, suicide, machismo that oppresses men (since it imposes a pattern of oppressive masculine behavior - man has to be an eater, man does not you can cry .... anyway). The Plant brings the monoculture of sugar cane, aggravating the misery of the people of Paraíba, since rice, beans and potatoes are prohibited, they can only plant ... sugar cane. Ricardo dies when he is crushed by a hungry people, when the warehouse doors are opened (Ricardo's empathy makes him feel sorry for the people). Modern machinery does not prevent the decay of the Plant, and the Paraíba River as an instrument of divine wrath, forces Usineiro Juca to flee to the higher ground. José Lins do Rego denounces the destruction of the environment, since the plant pollutes the Paraíba River.

  • @doreenlane2370
    @doreenlane2370 Před 3 lety

    Opinions and facts are different. Opinions are reality of that person but not always based on truth. Not knowing the truth can be harmful. Also, giving opinions without kindness always hurts.

  • @malonedickridesagain3998

    Here's the truth, life sucks, you can't trust anyone, you are born alone and you die alone. But i still try to do right and stay positive but it's getting harder each day.

  • @revinmike622
    @revinmike622 Před 3 lety

    Hey, Thanks for this Video. Really liking your content :)
    Just wanted to know what's the average RPM of your channel?

  • @jacquelineraner14
    @jacquelineraner14 Před 7 měsíci

    If humans were selfish and not egalitarian by nature how the hell did we survive to be the dominant species? I am pointing out the glaringly obvious which is that we had to produce enough offspring to replace each generation and grow in numbers. In essence that is 2 offspring per female human that is carried for 9 months and then several years of raising a baby that is helpless and vulnerable and can not even walk for 2 years while the group is nomadic hunter gatherers that would need to follow the migrations of animals they hunted or travel to where fruits were in season or to where water can be found. No. I can't agree that it is our nature to be selfish and this is actually the result of nurture. It is learned

  • @ahmadmhamadzahir8805
    @ahmadmhamadzahir8805 Před 3 lety

    🌺💚🖤❤️