Tag: Closed mind

  • Glued Closed

    Are you trapped in your own life, suffocated by forgetfulness? Struggling to break free even as the weight of reality presses down? Your senses sealed off, locked in a cycle of ignorance. It’s time to confront that stifling pressure and rediscover the world beyond your emotional fog.

  • How True Wise

    The content questions the necessity of respect, loyalty, and consistency when loyalty can be misplaced. It critiques the harshness of enduring lies, the rigidity of unchanging perspectives, and the misinterpretation of honest disagreement as disrespect. The piece urges reflection on these complex dynamics in relationships.

  • Looking at the Open Opened Mind

    The post describes a metaphorical mind space marked “Always Open,” encouraging openness to new ideas and perspectives. Positive reviews highlight its welcoming nature, relaxed atmosphere, and excellent problem-solving opportunities. Visitors express gratitude for the unique environment that fosters creativity and promotes values like cooperation and global peace.

  • The “Call For Perfection” Fallacy

    You want me to agree to impossible conditions. Stop trying to divert me and yourself away from what you are doing. Be honest. You have no intentions of thinking deeper about this issue. Instead, you are raising nothing but objections. Just admit you are a Scared Mental Thinker and that your mind is self-protectively closed.…

  • In Honor of Gramma

    In the 2023-2024 US school year, over 10,000 book bans impacted more than 4,000 titles, with Florida and Iowa seeing the highest rates. Reading shapes critical thinking and empathy. The narrative reflects on personal experiences, particularly an elderly grandmother whose late-life reading challenged her past views, illustrating the complex relationship between environment and learning.

  • A Book Recommendation

    The content contrasts the curiosity and openness of an inquisitive mind with the fear-driven resistance of a know-it-all. The latter, terrified of change, rejects new ideas without exploration, while the former embraces transformative experiences that enhance understanding and personal growth, showcasing the stark differences in attitudes toward knowledge.