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Sanju Lali wrote: ↑October 23rd, 2023, 1:19 pm
Human brain senses fellow human's pain and empathy is felt. Same is with respect to mouth watering to delicious food shows all of us are bound, but what makes some humans to behave like inhuman?
Sanju Lali, can you explain what you mean by "inhuman" exactly? Can you give some examples? Is it possible that what you are describing as "inhuman" behavior is actually quite common human behavior?
For example, metaphorically speaking, many humans like to act like their sh*t doesn't stink, and may even (delusionally) act and speak as though a normal good humany human would have non-stinky sh*t. Thus, they may refer to a human with stinky sh*t as inhuman or as having an un-humanlike scent to their sh*t, in that it stinks when according to their delusions a more humanly smell would be non-stinky.
In other words, many times what people label as "human-like" is actually quite unrealistic and uncommon, often betraying absurdly high expectations, and thus likewise what they label as "inhuman" is quite human-like.
For example, most humans are very dishonest and selfish. Most humans are also addicts who do not have exceptional self-discipline (a.k.a. spiritual freedom), and they are basically cowards who are spiritual slaves to things like fear, hunger, and addictive urges such as the urge of an alcoholic drink or gambling addict to gamble. So being honest is inhuman and being dishonest is human-like. Being brave is inhuman and being a spiritual slave to fear (a.k.a. a coward to some degree or another) is human-like. Having exceptional self-discipline (a.k.a. spiritual freedom) is inhuman (and by defintion exceptional) and behaving like an addict is human-like and ordinary.
Personally, I work very hard to do my best to be as unhuman-like as humanly possible. But I do that with a loving acceptance of the borderline paradox of such an endeavor, meaning a deep loving happy respect for that extreme three-word qualifier at the end:
"as humanly possible". In this human form, there is understandably only so little much wonderful inhumanity I can achieve.
To expect a human (even the one in the mirror) to be honest, unselfish, or brave is like expecting a bird to not grow feathers or a lion to not eat meat. Many humans foolishly expect all other humans to be very inhuman and then when those other humans don't live up to that absurd paradoxical standard, they judge, hate, resent, and scapegoat them. They might say,
"how dare you humans be human-like instead of exceptionally inhuman-like! I am unhappy because you don't live up to my absurd expectations about how unchangeable reality should be different than it unchangeably is!"
For my part, I might light a candle or spray some air freshener after going to the bathroom, but that's about as far towards the goal of inhumanity one might reasonably aim to go. I do my best to be as inhuman as humanly possible, but even that is a very small amount of inhumanity.
With love,
Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
a.k.a. Scott
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