Colors of care
April 14th, 2007In “le rouge sans le noir” Cairo Otaibi wrote
sometimes we do not care, those are the good times.
And because it is not right what you say I so much trust your words.
In “le rouge sans le noir” Cairo Otaibi wrote
sometimes we do not care, those are the good times.
And because it is not right what you say I so much trust your words.
A friend once asked me whether I can explain the fact that my companion was important to me. After some months (to have my mind settle) I replied:
What I love is her contradiction, and her withstanding.
[*]
If a tree falls in the forest and no one hears it,
does it make a sound?
— George Berkeley (1561-1626)
Enough people, it might seem, wrote about the term attention whore. The Urban Dictionary expressively explains attention whore. The Uncyclopedia shows some imagery. Wonderful writer Cairo Otaibi pretended to out herself in a comment to No comment is a comment. Google lists a gazillion of results, and even more so, quite a number of people say: We are all attention whores.
I agree!
For it is such a nice example of a lying liar. And of course, we are all attention whores. Assuming some aren’t we wouldn’t know about them, would we?
Attention! A digression: If we are all attention whores, and if we cannot know about those who aren’t, might this prove that we are all liars because we wouldn’t know of people who tell the truth?
Attention again! An answer: Truth is that those telling the truth are the actual liars. — I wonder who could read this out of George Berkeley’s writings.
Thinking of perception, like in how we perceive a tree, does the tree create a mental notion, or does our mind create the tree? Is attention an attention whore’s service, or is she paid by it?
Ouroboros, you are her mother.