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Post by Caylus Ark on Aug 9, 2016 7:42:08 GMT
If somebody is a serial killer they have a MAJOR problem that some soul searching alone is not going to fix Ok, then not serial killer... Should anyone who is hurting someone in some way should just forgive him/herself of he/she should try to change that and transform him/herself to a better person as soon as possible to avoid the pain of people involved? The desire to change ought to be the heart of the ability to forgive oneself. Often, the problem with psychopaths is that they do not require self-forgiveness because they don't see the fault in their actions. They manage to justify their way out of any wrongdoing.
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Post by Amadeus on Aug 9, 2016 8:05:40 GMT
Ok, then not serial killer... Should anyone who is hurting someone in some way should just forgive him/herself of he/she should try to change that and transform him/herself to a better person as soon as possible to avoid the pain of people involved? The desire to change ought to be the heart of the ability to forgive oneself. Often, the problem with psychopaths is that they do not require self-forgiveness because they don't see the fault in their actions. They manage to justify their way out of any wrongdoing. changing our environment to suit oneself because our environment and yourself agree enough to cause your change to become noticeable to others similar enough to yourself to notice your environmental alteration also is what occurs every nanosecond (feedback) to everyone that notices how could this not be so who notices who notices and knows how and why discovery by experience where do you draw the line topic
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Post by Montblanc on Aug 9, 2016 17:31:54 GMT
If somebody is a serial killer they have a MAJOR problem that some soul searching alone is not going to fix Ok, then not serial killer... Should anyone who is hurting someone in some way should just forgive him/herself of he/she should try to change that and transform him/herself to a better person as soon as possible to avoid the pain of people involved? C'mon, that's just poisoning the well. Ideally, yes everyone should forgive themselves and accept responsability for their deeds, man up you could say. Acknowledge your own faults as an integral part of yourself is the first step towards self-improvement, are there unreformable people? I don't know, but there's causality.
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