"A lot of hippies and babyboomers are learning that painfully now."

Or perhaps materialism is better and spiritualism for existing on this 
planet?  Those who worship wealth may fare better than those who follow 
a spiritual path?  I often found it hard once on a spiritual path to 
focus on money.  What income there was seemed to come incidentally.  But 
then maybe it is just all karma for there are certainly folks who kept 
following a spiritual path yet became wealthy.  I also find it very 
interesting what kind of people have jobs now and those who are unemployed.

On 03/01/2013 04:18 AM, seekliberation wrote:
> It makes sense to me when I read the article.  But I also think there is a 
> fine line between those who look at the glass as half empty, and those who 
> just sit around in a state of misery and do nothing to increase what's in the 
> glass.
>
> So I guess it's not as simple as 'half-empty, half-full'.  It's more complex 
> than that.  I guess it may be more like this:
>
> 1.  The glass is half full, so i'll just sit on my ass for now.
> 2.  The glass is half full, so i'll save it for later.
> 3.  The glass is half empty, so I better start filling it up now.
> 4.  The glass is half empty, therefore life sucks.
>
> I would say that #2 & #3 are a healthy approach.  So it's not just that 
> pessimism is better, it's that DOING something to improve your situation is 
> superior to relaxing and assuming that everything is going to work out just 
> fine.  And it's the pessimist who will percieve the need for action more so 
> than the optimist.  A lot of hippies and babyboomers are learning that 
> painfully now.
>
> seekliberation
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb <no_reply@...> wrote:
>> The pessimists you rag on will outlive you.
>>
>> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/28/pessimists-live-longer-lives-study_n_2781598.html
>>
>
>

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