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#1
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Please, guys, give Roger a break and remember him in your prayers.
We all know Roger has not been well for years and years, and these last two weeks have been a particularly difficult time for him. Roger suffers from congenital heart problems, a problem that at fifty years of age, is difficult to deal with. How about all of us say a silent prayer for Roger and ask God to speed Roger on his road to recovery? There is power in prayer and who knows? Maybe our prayers can help speed Woger to a quick recovery. And if God doesn't listen??? Well, Roger is going to die. Bottom line? Nobody cares. |
#2
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There is no word in our language to explain this feeling.
In fact only the German language has a word for this: "Schadenfreude". It means taking pleasure in the misfortune of others. It is not necessarily malicious, or envious. It can be a just pleasu the fall from grace was deserved. "As I learned there was a word for this, albeit in another language, in German, and so sort of as a hobby I continued to look into this subject of why is it that we feel pleasure when bad things happen to other people. And the more I looked, the more fascinated I became - in part, because I couldn't find anything. No one seemed to have written on it. And eventually, I came across a clue in the writings of Arthur Schopenhauer, a very influential 19th- century German philosopher who, in the 1840s, says essentially "turn back, don't look any further. There is a kind of pleasure that we take in the misfortunes of other people. It is called Schadenfreude, and it is a sign that the devil is working in a person". And this is very curious, because I knew that Schopenhauer, an atheist, didn't believe in God. And so I was intrigued that he referred to this religious imagery - to frighten us, if you will. Not long after Schopenhauer wrote, in the 1840s, that we should banish from our communities any monster who ever witnessed taking pleasure in the misfortunes or sufferings of other people, an English Archbishop named R. C. Trench used the word Schadenfreude by name, in a book that he wrote called The Study of Words. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, this English Archbishop R. C. Trench is the first person ever to use the word Schadenfreude in the English language. And his use was quite curious. He'd moved to a discussion of frightening words, and he used as one of his primary illustrations the word Schadenfreude - he said to English speakers "our neighbours, the Germans, have a word for taking pleasure in the misfortunes of other people", and he said that the mere fact that the German language contained a word for this phenomenon was evidence that all of German culture was polluted, was tainted." - John Portmann http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group...e/message/2797 "Lights Out" wrote in message ... Please, guys, give Roger a break and remember him in your prayers. We all know Roger has not been well for years and years, and these last two weeks have been a particularly difficult time for him. Roger suffers from congenital heart problems, a problem that at fifty years of age, is difficult to deal with. How about all of us say a silent prayer for Roger and ask God to speed Roger on his road to recovery? There is power in prayer and who knows? Maybe our prayers can help speed Woger to a quick recovery. And if God doesn't listen??? Well, Roger is going to die. Bottom line? Nobody cares. |
#3
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![]() Lights Out wrote: Please, Poor Lardass, can't go two seconds without thinking of his owner. |
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