CityK said:I think cremation is a good thing personally.
Anyways, some food for thought:
Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms -- to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances.
--- Victor Frankl
Mercutio said:Now, now.
There's nothing horrific about being a homosexual.
OTOH, a gay person can empathize a whole heck of a lot easier as they don't have to imagine their partner's physiology. And I've heard before that homosexual relationships tend to be a lot more stable. Maybe what's needed is someone to function as the emotional equivalent of the same sex, not the other.Howell said:Asking someone of the same sex to function as an emotional equivalent to the opposite sex is an exercise in futility.
Emotional self-destruction sounds pretty horrific to me.
Howell said:Asking someone of the same sex to function as an emotional equivalent to the opposite sex is an exercise in futility.
Emotional self-destruction sounds pretty horrific to me.
Yes, I believe it does affect neurotransmitters and synaptic response.i think the sleep deprivatin affects teh attitudes deplettion the synapses balcne of the trsadnsmitters.
A bit of both it seems: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_E._FranklLOST6200 said:WAs thast guy a nureologist or just a phoiliospher?
I can't claim to know much about the man, as I've never read anything he wrote other then snippets printed here and there. Nonetheless, I like basis of the quotation I mentioned above.Im way t o fycking tiried to understand the last one
Mercutio said:Howell said:Asking someone of the same sex to function as an emotional equivalent to the opposite sex is an exercise in futility.
Emotional self-destruction sounds pretty horrific to me.
Someone who writes things like that obviously hasn't spent any time getting to know actual gay people.
Fushigi said:OTOH, a gay person can empathize a whole heck of a lot easier as they don't have to imagine their partner's physiology. And I've heard before that homosexual relationships tend to be a lot more stable. Maybe what's needed is someone to function as the emotional equivalent of the same sex, not the other.Howell said:Asking someone of the same sex to function as an emotional equivalent to the opposite sex is an exercise in futility.
Emotional self-destruction sounds pretty horrific to me.
Howell said:You CAN have deep emotional relationships with people of the same sex. These relationships are called friendships.
Howell said:On the contrary, to dismiss my statements out of hand means you've never considered yourself a homosexual or known someone else who once was.
Mercutio said:Apologies to Lost6200 for the threadjack...
Howell said:On the contrary, to dismiss my statements out of hand means you've never considered yourself a homosexual or known someone else who once was.
Excuse me? I am not the person making ignorant and highly prejudicial statements about gay people.
Every single person I socialize with by choice outside of my work - every one - is gay, bisexual or transgendered (and sometimes two out of three). I have not observed any of those people asking their partner to fulfill the "the emotional equivalent of the opposite sex", ever.
Howell, I don't care what your church teaches, or what weirdo beliefs you might have on the subject, a person can be happy and well adjusted and still be gay, and a straight person in a devoted relationship can still experience "emotional self destruction". If you spent any time with anyone whose sexuality is different from yours, perhaps you could see that.