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Petition to ban jw5 for bumping old threads with multiple clones

no more prospects as i’m retired and retarded. but at least i have some spare change 6.9 days ago and invested it on tsm, amzn, and data center reits.

I do not think money makes people happy. I was happier when I had nothing. I spent my whole life amassing wealth. I have learned alot in this life. I wish I could go back in time. A famous businessman shared this story with me on a flight once. What do you think?

The Story of the Mexican Fisherman​


An American investment banker was at the pier of a small coastal Mexican village when a small boat with just one fisherman docked. Inside the small boat were several large yellowfin tuna. The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took to catch them.

The Mexican replied, “only a little while. The American then asked why didn’t he stay out longer and catch more fish? The Mexican said he had enough to support his family’s immediate needs. The American then asked, “but what do you do with the rest of your time?”

The Mexican fisherman said, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take siestas with my wife, Maria, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine, and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life.”

The American scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat. With the proceeds from the bigger boat, you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing, and distribution. You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then LA and eventually New York City, where you will run your expanding enterprise.”

The Mexican fisherman asked, “But, how long will this all take?”

To which the American replied, “15 – 20 years.”

“But what then?” Asked the Mexican.

The American laughed and said, “That’s the best part. When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions!”

“Millions – then what?”

The American said, “Then you would retire. Move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take siestas with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”
 
I do not think money makes people happy. I was happier when I had nothing. I spent my whole life amassing wealth. I have learned alot in this life. I wish I could go back in time. A famous businessman shared this story with me on a flight once. What do you think?

The Story of the Mexican Fisherman​


An American investment banker was at the pier of a small coastal Mexican village when a small boat with just one fisherman docked. Inside the small boat were several large yellowfin tuna. The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took to catch them.

The Mexican replied, “only a little while. The American then asked why didn’t he stay out longer and catch more fish? The Mexican said he had enough to support his family’s immediate needs. The American then asked, “but what do you do with the rest of your time?”

The Mexican fisherman said, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take siestas with my wife, Maria, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine, and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life.”

The American scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat. With the proceeds from the bigger boat, you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing, and distribution. You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then LA and eventually New York City, where you will run your expanding enterprise.”

The Mexican fisherman asked, “But, how long will this all take?”

To which the American replied, “15 – 20 years.”

“But what then?” Asked the Mexican.

The American laughed and said, “That’s the best part. When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions!”

“Millions – then what?”

The American said, “Then you would retire. Move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take siestas with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”

yeah this is the Mexican fisherman ONLY THINKING ABOUT HIMSELF.

The difference is that his kids would no longer need to worry about food and money. His wife as well.

Also when he gets sick and has no money? Or his kids get sick?

The above account is exactly why these laid back sit under coconut tree playing guitar lifestyle loving people remain......POOR.

Sure can be POOR and happy then dead.

Can also be RICH and unhappy then dead.

In the end all dead also lah.
 
I do not think money makes people happy. I was happier when I had nothing. I spent my whole life amassing wealth. I have learned alot in this life. I wish I could go back in time. A famous businessman shared this story with me on a flight once. What do you think?

The Story of the Mexican Fisherman​


An American investment banker was at the pier of a small coastal Mexican village when a small boat with just one fisherman docked. Inside the small boat were several large yellowfin tuna. The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took to catch them.

The Mexican replied, “only a little while. The American then asked why didn’t he stay out longer and catch more fish? The Mexican said he had enough to support his family’s immediate needs. The American then asked, “but what do you do with the rest of your time?”

The Mexican fisherman said, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take siestas with my wife, Maria, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine, and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life.”

The American scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat. With the proceeds from the bigger boat, you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing, and distribution. You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then LA and eventually New York City, where you will run your expanding enterprise.”

The Mexican fisherman asked, “But, how long will this all take?”

To which the American replied, “15 – 20 years.”

“But what then?” Asked the Mexican.

The American laughed and said, “That’s the best part. When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions!”

“Millions – then what?”

The American said, “Then you would retire. Move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take siestas with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”
it’s not the money. it’s about $696k of cash in a tax-sheltered ira account that does nothing. instead of idling and doing nothing may as well put it to good use. it’s not like i need the money, plus i can’t withdraw it anyway due to its tax-free status in an ira. money put to productive use by investing it in growth businesses help those businesses thrive better, and thousands more earning minimum wage can be hired. just 2 days ago, a billionaire who just retired last year, bought a bunch of collectible cars as toys for his multi-car garage, ended up dead after a white bmw going at high speed smashed into his red vintage sedan. sad and sudden. if he were to ride a bicycle or a pmd on a dedicated bike lane, he would still be alive today.
 
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/how_to_find_your_purpose_in_life

How to Find Your Purpose in Life​

Are you struggling to discover your purpose? That may be because you feel isolated from other people. Here's how you can overcome that.​

BY JEREMY ADAM SMITH | JANUARY 10, 2018
Do you have a sense of purpose?
For decades, psychologists have studied how long-term, meaningful goals develop over the span of our lives. The goals that foster a sense of purpose are ones that can potentially change the lives of other people, like launching an organization, researching disease, or teaching kids to read.
Indeed, a sense of purpose appears to have evolved in humans so that we can accomplish big things together—which may be why it’s associated with better physical and mental health. Purpose is adaptive, in an evolutionary sense. It helps both individuals and the species to survive.
Many seem to believe that purpose arises from your special gifts and sets you apart from other people—but that’s only part of the truth. It also grows from our connection to others, which is why a crisis of purpose is often a symptom of isolation. Once you find your path, you’ll almost certainly find others traveling along with you, hoping to reach the same destination—a community.
Here are six ways to overcome isolation and discover your purpose in life.

1. Read​

man-reading-smaller.jpg

Reading connects us to people we’ll never know, across time and space—an experience that research says is linked to a sense of meaning and purpose. (Note: “Meaning” and “purpose” are related but separate social-scientific constructs. Purpose is a part of meaning; meaning is a much broader concept that usually also includes value, efficacy, and self-worth.)
In a 2010 paper, for example, Leslie Francis studied a group of nearly 26,000 teenagers throughout England and Wales—and found that those who read the Bible more tended to have a stronger sense of purpose. Secular reading seems to make a difference, as well. In a survey of empirical studies, Raymond A. Mar and colleagues found a link between reading poetry and fiction and a sense of purpose among adolescents.
“Reading fiction might allow adolescents to reason about the whole lives of characters, giving them specific insight into an entire lifespan without having to have fully lived most of their own lives,” they suggest. By seeing purpose in the lives of other people, teens are more likely to see it in their own lives. In this sense, purpose is an act of the imagination.
Many people I interviewed for this article mentioned pivotal books or ideas they found in books.
The writing of historian W.E.B. Du Bois pushed social-justice activist Art McGee to embrace a specific vision of African-American identity and liberation. Journalist Michael Stoll found inspiration in the “social responsibility theory of journalism,” which he read about at Stanford University. “Basically, reporters and editors have not just the ability but also the duty to improve their community by being independent arbiters of problems that need solving,” he says. “It’s been my professional North Star ever since.” Spurred by this idea, Michael went on to launch an award-winning nonprofit news agency called The San Francisco Public Press.
So, if you’re feeling a crisis of purpose in your life, go to the bookstore or library or university. Find books that matter to you—and they might help you to see what matters in your own life.

2. Turn hurts into healing for others​

  • JOIN THE PURPOSE CHALLENGE

    Want to help high schoolers find purpose? The GGSC's Purpose Challenge for students, educators, and parents incorporates cutting-edge science into videos and interactive exercises. Students can get help with their college essay and win up to $25,000 in scholarship money.
Of course, finding purpose is not just an intellectual pursuit; it’s something we need to feel. That’s why it can grow out of suffering, both our own and others’.
Kezia Willingham was raised in poverty in Corvallis, Oregon, her family riven by domestic violence. “No one at school intervened or helped or supported my mother, myself, or my brother when I was growing up poor, ashamed, and sure that my existence was a mistake,” she says. “I was running the streets, skipping school, having sex with strangers, and abusing every drug I could get my hands on.”
When she was 16, Kezia enrolled at an alternative high school that “led me to believe I had options and a path out of poverty.” She made her way to college and was especially “drawn to the kids with ‘issues’”—kids like the one she had once been. She says:
I want the kids out there who grew up like me, to know they have futures ahead of them. I want them to know they are smart, even if they may not meet state academic standards. I want them to know that they are just as good and valuable as any other human who happens to be born into more privileged circumstances. Because they are. And there are so damn many messages telling them otherwise.
Sometimes, another person’s pain can lead us to purpose. When Christopher Pepper was a senior in high school, a “trembling, tearful friend” told him that she had been raped by a classmate. “I comforted as well as I could, and left that conversation vowing that I would do something to keep this from happening to others,” says Christopher. He kept that promise by becoming a Peer Rape Educator in college—and then a sex educator in San Francisco public schools.
Why do people like Kezia and Christopher seem to find purpose in suffering—while others are crushed by it? Part of the answer, as we’ll see next, might have to do with the emotions and behaviors we cultivate in ourselves.

3. Cultivate awe, gratitude, and altruism​

Certain emotions and behaviors that promote health and well-being can also foster a sense of purpose—specifically, awe, gratitude, and altruism.
Several studies conducted by the Greater Good Science Center’s Dacher Keltner have shown that the experience of awe makes us feel connected to something larger than ourselves—and so can provide the emotional foundation for a sense of purpose.
Of course, awe all by itself won’t give you a purpose in life. It’s not enough to just feel like you’re a small part of something big; you also need to feel driven to make a positive impact on the world. That’s where gratitude and generosity come into play.
“It may seem counterintuitive to foster purpose by cultivating a grateful mindset, but it works,” writes psychologist Kendall Bronk, a leading expert on purpose. As research by William Damon, Robert Emmons, and others has found, children and adults who are able to count their blessings are much more likely to try to “contribute to the world beyond themselves.” This is probably because, if we can see how others make our world a better place, we’ll be more motivated to give something back.
Here we arrive at altruism. There’s little question, at this point, that helping others is associated with a meaningful, purposeful life. In one study, for example, Daryl Van Tongeren and colleagues found that people who engage in more altruistic behaviors, like volunteering or donating money, tend to have a greater sense of purpose in their lives.
Interestingly, gratitude and altruism seem to work together to generate meaning and purpose. In a second experiment, the researchers randomly assigned some participants to write letters of gratitude—and those people later reported a stronger sense of purpose. More recent work by Christina Karns and colleagues found that altruism and gratitude are neurologically linked, activating the same reward circuits in the brain.

4. Listen to what other people appreciate about you​

Shawn Taylor with his family
Shawn Taylor with his family
Giving thanks can help you find your purpose. But you can also find purpose in what people thank you for.
Like Kezia Willingham, Shawn Taylor had a tough childhood—and he was also drawn to working with kids who had severe behavioral problems. Unlike her, however, he often felt like the work was a dead-end. “I thought I sucked at my chosen profession,” he says. Then, one day, a girl he’d worked with five years before contacted him.
“She detailed how I helped to change her life,” says Shawn—and she asked him to walk her down the aisle when she got married. Shawn hadn’t even thought about her, in all that time. “Something clicked and I knew this was my path. No specifics, but youth work was my purpose.”
The artists, writers, and musicians I interviewed often described how appreciation from others fueled their work. Dani Burlison never lacked a sense of purpose, and she toiled for years as a writer and social-justice activist in Santa Rosa, California. But when wildfires swept through her community, Dani discovered that her strengths were needed in a new way: “I’ve found that my networking and emergency response skills have been really helpful to my community, my students, and to firefighters!”
Although there is no research that directly explores how being thanked might fuel a sense of purpose, we do know that gratitude strengthens relationships—and those are often the source of our purpose, as many of these stories suggest.

5. Find and build community​

purpose-plant-small.jpeg

As we see in Dani’s case, we can often find our sense of purpose in the people around us.
Many people told me about finding purpose in family. In tandem with his reading, Art McGee found purpose—working for social and racial justice—in “love and respect for my hardworking father,” he says. “Working people like him deserved so much better.”
Environmental and social-justice organizer Jodi Sugerman-Brozan feels driven “to leave the world in a better place than I found it.” Becoming a mom “strengthened that purpose (it’s going to be their world, and their kids’ world),” she says. It “definitely influences how I parent (wanting to raise anti-racist, feminist, radical kids who will want to continue the fight and be leaders).”
Of course, our kids may not embrace our purpose. Amber Cantorna was raised by purpose-driven parents who were right-wing Christians. “My mom had us involved in stuff all the time, all within that conservative Christian bubble,” she says. This family and community fueled a strong sense of purpose in Amber: “To be a good Christian and role model. To be a blessing to other people.”
The trouble is that this underlying purpose involved making other people more like them. When she came out as a lesbian at age 27, Amber’s family and community swiftly and suddenly cast her out. This triggered a deep crisis of purpose—one that she resolved by finding a new faith community “that helped shape me and gave me a sense of belonging,” she says.
Often, the nobility of our purpose reflects the company we keep. The purpose that came from Amber’s parents was based on exclusion, as she discovered. There was no place—and no purpose—for her in that community once she embraced an identity they couldn’t accept. A new sense of purpose came with the new community and identity she helped to build, of gay and lesbian Christians.
If you’re having trouble remembering your purpose, take a look at the people around you. What do you have in common with them? What are they trying to be? What impact do you see them having on the world? Is that impact a positive one? Can you join with them in making that impact? What do they need? Can you give it them?
If the answers to those questions don’t inspire you, then you might need to find a new community—and with that, a new purpose may come.

6. Tell your story​

Amber Cantorna
Amber Cantorna
Reading can help you find your purpose—but so can writing,
Purpose often arises from curiosity about your own life. What obstacles have you encountered? What strengths helped you to overcome them? How did other people help you? How did your strengths help make life better for others?
“We all have the ability to make a narrative out of our own lives,” says Emily Esfahani Smith, author of the 2017 book The Power of Meaning. “It gives us clarity on our own lives, how to understand ourselves, and gives us a framework that goes beyond the day-to-day and basically helps us make sense of our experiences.”
That’s why Amber Cantorna wrote her memoir, Refocusing My Family: Coming Out, Being Cast Out, and Discovering the True Love of God. At first depressed after losing everyone she loved, Amber soon discovered new strengths in herself—and she is using her book to help build a nonprofit organization called Beyond to support gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Christians in their coming-out process.
One 2008 study found that those who see meaning and purpose in their lives are able to tell a story of change and growth, where they managed to overcome the obstacles they encountered. In other words, creating a narrative like Amber’s can help us to see our own strengths and how applying those strengths can make a difference in the world, which increases our sense of self-efficacy.
This is a valuable reflective process to all people, but Amber took it one step further, by publishing her autobiography and turning it into a tool for social change. Today, Amber’s purpose is to help people like her feel less alone.
“My sense of purpose has grown a lot with my desire to share my story—and the realization that so many other people have shared my journey.”
 
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/how_to_find_your_purpose_in_life

How to Find Your Purpose in Life​

Are you struggling to discover your purpose? That may be because you feel isolated from other people. Here's how you can overcome that.​

BY JEREMY ADAM SMITH | JANUARY 10, 2018
Do you have a sense of purpose?
For decades, psychologists have studied how long-term, meaningful goals develop over the span of our lives. The goals that foster a sense of purpose are ones that can potentially change the lives of other people, like launching an organization, researching disease, or teaching kids to read.
Indeed, a sense of purpose appears to have evolved in humans so that we can accomplish big things together—which may be why it’s associated with better physical and mental health. Purpose is adaptive, in an evolutionary sense. It helps both individuals and the species to survive.
Many seem to believe that purpose arises from your special gifts and sets you apart from other people—but that’s only part of the truth. It also grows from our connection to others, which is why a crisis of purpose is often a symptom of isolation. Once you find your path, you’ll almost certainly find others traveling along with you, hoping to reach the same destination—a community.
Here are six ways to overcome isolation and discover your purpose in life.

1. Read​

man-reading-smaller.jpg

Reading connects us to people we’ll never know, across time and space—an experience that research says is linked to a sense of meaning and purpose. (Note: “Meaning” and “purpose” are related but separate social-scientific constructs. Purpose is a part of meaning; meaning is a much broader concept that usually also includes value, efficacy, and self-worth.)
In a 2010 paper, for example, Leslie Francis studied a group of nearly 26,000 teenagers throughout England and Wales—and found that those who read the Bible more tended to have a stronger sense of purpose. Secular reading seems to make a difference, as well. In a survey of empirical studies, Raymond A. Mar and colleagues found a link between reading poetry and fiction and a sense of purpose among adolescents.
“Reading fiction might allow adolescents to reason about the whole lives of characters, giving them specific insight into an entire lifespan without having to have fully lived most of their own lives,” they suggest. By seeing purpose in the lives of other people, teens are more likely to see it in their own lives. In this sense, purpose is an act of the imagination.
Many people I interviewed for this article mentioned pivotal books or ideas they found in books.
The writing of historian W.E.B. Du Bois pushed social-justice activist Art McGee to embrace a specific vision of African-American identity and liberation. Journalist Michael Stoll found inspiration in the “social responsibility theory of journalism,” which he read about at Stanford University. “Basically, reporters and editors have not just the ability but also the duty to improve their community by being independent arbiters of problems that need solving,” he says. “It’s been my professional North Star ever since.” Spurred by this idea, Michael went on to launch an award-winning nonprofit news agency called The San Francisco Public Press.
So, if you’re feeling a crisis of purpose in your life, go to the bookstore or library or university. Find books that matter to you—and they might help you to see what matters in your own life.

2. Turn hurts into healing for others​

  • JOIN THE PURPOSE CHALLENGE

    Want to help high schoolers find purpose? The GGSC's Purpose Challenge for students, educators, and parents incorporates cutting-edge science into videos and interactive exercises. Students can get help with their college essay and win up to $25,000 in scholarship money.
Of course, finding purpose is not just an intellectual pursuit; it’s something we need to feel. That’s why it can grow out of suffering, both our own and others’.
Kezia Willingham was raised in poverty in Corvallis, Oregon, her family riven by domestic violence. “No one at school intervened or helped or supported my mother, myself, or my brother when I was growing up poor, ashamed, and sure that my existence was a mistake,” she says. “I was running the streets, skipping school, having sex with strangers, and abusing every drug I could get my hands on.”
When she was 16, Kezia enrolled at an alternative high school that “led me to believe I had options and a path out of poverty.” She made her way to college and was especially “drawn to the kids with ‘issues’”—kids like the one she had once been. She says:

Sometimes, another person’s pain can lead us to purpose. When Christopher Pepper was a senior in high school, a “trembling, tearful friend” told him that she had been raped by a classmate. “I comforted as well as I could, and left that conversation vowing that I would do something to keep this from happening to others,” says Christopher. He kept that promise by becoming a Peer Rape Educator in college—and then a sex educator in San Francisco public schools.
Why do people like Kezia and Christopher seem to find purpose in suffering—while others are crushed by it? Part of the answer, as we’ll see next, might have to do with the emotions and behaviors we cultivate in ourselves.

3. Cultivate awe, gratitude, and altruism​

Certain emotions and behaviors that promote health and well-being can also foster a sense of purpose—specifically, awe, gratitude, and altruism.
Several studies conducted by the Greater Good Science Center’s Dacher Keltner have shown that the experience of awe makes us feel connected to something larger than ourselves—and so can provide the emotional foundation for a sense of purpose.
Of course, awe all by itself won’t give you a purpose in life. It’s not enough to just feel like you’re a small part of something big; you also need to feel driven to make a positive impact on the world. That’s where gratitude and generosity come into play.
“It may seem counterintuitive to foster purpose by cultivating a grateful mindset, but it works,” writes psychologist Kendall Bronk, a leading expert on purpose. As research by William Damon, Robert Emmons, and others has found, children and adults who are able to count their blessings are much more likely to try to “contribute to the world beyond themselves.” This is probably because, if we can see how others make our world a better place, we’ll be more motivated to give something back.
Here we arrive at altruism. There’s little question, at this point, that helping others is associated with a meaningful, purposeful life. In one study, for example, Daryl Van Tongeren and colleagues found that people who engage in more altruistic behaviors, like volunteering or donating money, tend to have a greater sense of purpose in their lives.
Interestingly, gratitude and altruism seem to work together to generate meaning and purpose. In a second experiment, the researchers randomly assigned some participants to write letters of gratitude—and those people later reported a stronger sense of purpose. More recent work by Christina Karns and colleagues found that altruism and gratitude are neurologically linked, activating the same reward circuits in the brain.

4. Listen to what other people appreciate about you​

Shawn Taylor with his family
Shawn Taylor with his family
Giving thanks can help you find your purpose. But you can also find purpose in what people thank you for.
Like Kezia Willingham, Shawn Taylor had a tough childhood—and he was also drawn to working with kids who had severe behavioral problems. Unlike her, however, he often felt like the work was a dead-end. “I thought I sucked at my chosen profession,” he says. Then, one day, a girl he’d worked with five years before contacted him.
“She detailed how I helped to change her life,” says Shawn—and she asked him to walk her down the aisle when she got married. Shawn hadn’t even thought about her, in all that time. “Something clicked and I knew this was my path. No specifics, but youth work was my purpose.”
The artists, writers, and musicians I interviewed often described how appreciation from others fueled their work. Dani Burlison never lacked a sense of purpose, and she toiled for years as a writer and social-justice activist in Santa Rosa, California. But when wildfires swept through her community, Dani discovered that her strengths were needed in a new way: “I’ve found that my networking and emergency response skills have been really helpful to my community, my students, and to firefighters!”
Although there is no research that directly explores how being thanked might fuel a sense of purpose, we do know that gratitude strengthens relationships—and those are often the source of our purpose, as many of these stories suggest.

5. Find and build community​

purpose-plant-small.jpeg

As we see in Dani’s case, we can often find our sense of purpose in the people around us.
Many people told me about finding purpose in family. In tandem with his reading, Art McGee found purpose—working for social and racial justice—in “love and respect for my hardworking father,” he says. “Working people like him deserved so much better.”
Environmental and social-justice organizer Jodi Sugerman-Brozan feels driven “to leave the world in a better place than I found it.” Becoming a mom “strengthened that purpose (it’s going to be their world, and their kids’ world),” she says. It “definitely influences how I parent (wanting to raise anti-racist, feminist, radical kids who will want to continue the fight and be leaders).”
Of course, our kids may not embrace our purpose. Amber Cantorna was raised by purpose-driven parents who were right-wing Christians. “My mom had us involved in stuff all the time, all within that conservative Christian bubble,” she says. This family and community fueled a strong sense of purpose in Amber: “To be a good Christian and role model. To be a blessing to other people.”
The trouble is that this underlying purpose involved making other people more like them. When she came out as a lesbian at age 27, Amber’s family and community swiftly and suddenly cast her out. This triggered a deep crisis of purpose—one that she resolved by finding a new faith community “that helped shape me and gave me a sense of belonging,” she says.
Often, the nobility of our purpose reflects the company we keep. The purpose that came from Amber’s parents was based on exclusion, as she discovered. There was no place—and no purpose—for her in that community once she embraced an identity they couldn’t accept. A new sense of purpose came with the new community and identity she helped to build, of gay and lesbian Christians.
If you’re having trouble remembering your purpose, take a look at the people around you. What do you have in common with them? What are they trying to be? What impact do you see them having on the world? Is that impact a positive one? Can you join with them in making that impact? What do they need? Can you give it them?
If the answers to those questions don’t inspire you, then you might need to find a new community—and with that, a new purpose may come.

6. Tell your story​

Amber Cantorna
Amber Cantorna
Reading can help you find your purpose—but so can writing,
Purpose often arises from curiosity about your own life. What obstacles have you encountered? What strengths helped you to overcome them? How did other people help you? How did your strengths help make life better for others?
“We all have the ability to make a narrative out of our own lives,” says Emily Esfahani Smith, author of the 2017 book The Power of Meaning. “It gives us clarity on our own lives, how to understand ourselves, and gives us a framework that goes beyond the day-to-day and basically helps us make sense of our experiences.”
That’s why Amber Cantorna wrote her memoir, Refocusing My Family: Coming Out, Being Cast Out, and Discovering the True Love of God. At first depressed after losing everyone she loved, Amber soon discovered new strengths in herself—and she is using her book to help build a nonprofit organization called Beyond to support gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Christians in their coming-out process.
One 2008 study found that those who see meaning and purpose in their lives are able to tell a story of change and growth, where they managed to overcome the obstacles they encountered. In other words, creating a narrative like Amber’s can help us to see our own strengths and how applying those strengths can make a difference in the world, which increases our sense of self-efficacy.
This is a valuable reflective process to all people, but Amber took it one step further, by publishing her autobiography and turning it into a tool for social change. Today, Amber’s purpose is to help people like her feel less alone.
“My sense of purpose has grown a lot with my desire to share my story—and the realization that so many other people have shared my journey.”


Doc .. awesome post.



I don't want to start a new petition. But but... can you start the UNIFYING thingy rolling. If it can happen in SBF it'll be like a lotus rising from the m&d. Give humanity a chance ffs. :P <3

As Sam had said many time. If i were to intervene what's the point of having MODS ? Well said.

Everyone makes mistakes. When i said i don't think this forum cost $300 per month but ThickFaceBlackHeart said i'm being naïve & silly and Sam showed the receipt, in both occasions i click the like button i didn't say anything else. So what if i'm wrong no biggy nobody is always right or all good is it not ?

The key is in the first place nobody should fark Sam and stalk him over and over and cuss him again and again. This is his forum ! He can take it kudos but we especially you all as MODS shouldn't allow this.

So we might as well clean up. LaoTze use to post so much minion cartoons as his signature he was told not too because it takes up unnecessary resource especially for slow handphone to load. He stopped !

When we ask to stop posting that handsome photo of Mark Yeo we had enuff they stopped. So now what else is beyond 'acceptable' standard ? FFA ya but still there has to be a line.

1. Stop stalking Sam with cuss over and over. If you comment to his certain post go fark yourself once in a while no biggy but not stalking and repeating. At least is farking boring man....... low iQ retard action. A disgrace to humanity. Same 2 sentence lines repeating over and over and hoping for a different results ?

Well you got it we had enuff ! Warn them and if repeat ban them for 2 hours, next time 2 days, next time 2 weeks.........etc

2. The cussing of Ginfreely has to change i honestly don't know how because sometimes it appear she asked for it............. /rofl. But nao she tries to post logically medical research too which is good. WTF when she's gone you guys kept asking where is she. Knn... she appeared, we cuss her none stop it's not even funny... but boring and low class.

3. Then those disgusting 'i fark my sister' bo liao thread starter repeated or ban by EDMW and now appearing here. Jitao ban those farkers IP lah. Such low class and disgrace to humanity.


Since you said it's not worth paying $300 monthly for this shitz and had asked Sam to close this forum then lets try at least to make a difference see how it work out ? The power is in y'all hands. No point kpkb but do nothing is it not ?


1623972126046.png



*The world is changing very fast in this 5G and Quantum timeline we can share infos and knowledge and new things we come across and share some fun and light moments or jokes. INFORMATION is everything.

Change with the times. Evolve !
 
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Doc .. awesome post.



I don't want to start a new petition. But but... can you start the UNIFYING thingy rolling. If it can happen in SBF it'll be like a lotus rising from the m&d. Give humanity a chance ffs. :P <3

As Sam had said many time. If i were to intervene what's the point of having MODS ? Well said.

Everyone makes mistakes. When i said i don't think this forum cost $300 per month but ThickFaceBlackHeart said i'm being naïve & silly and Sam showed the receipt, in both occasions i click the like button i didn't say anything else. So what if i'm wrong no biggy nobody is always right or all good is it not ?

The key is in the first place nobody should fark Sam and stalk him over and over and cuss him again and again. This is his forum ! He can take it kudos but we especially you all as MODS shouldn't allow this.

So we might as well clean up. LaoTze use to post so much minion cartoons as his signature he was told not too because it takes up unnecessary resource especially for slow handphone to load. He stopped !

When we ask to stop posting that handsome photo of Mark Yeo we had enuff they stopped. So now what else is beyond 'acceptable' standard ? FFA ya but still there has to be a line.

1. Stop stalking Sam with cuss over and over. If you comment to his certain post go fark yourself once in a while no biggy but not stalking and repeating. At least is farking boring man....... low iQ retard action. A disgrace to humanity. Same 2 sentence lines repeating over and over and hoping for a different results ?

Well you got it we had enuff ! Warn them and if repeat ban them for 2 hours, next time 2 days, next time 2 weeks.........etc

2. The cussing of Ginfreely has to change i honestly don't know how because sometimes it appear she asked for it............. /rofl. But nao she tries to post logically medical research too which is good. WTF when she's gone you guys kept asking where is she. Knn... she appeared, we cuss her none stop it's not even funny... but boring and low class.

3. Then those disgusting 'i fark my sister' bo liao thread starter repeated or ban by EDMW and now appearing here. Jitao ban those farkers IP lah. Such low class and disgrace to humanity.


Since you said it's not worth paying $300 monthly for this shitz and had asked Sam to close this forum then lets try at least to make a difference see how it work out ? The power is in y'all hands. No point kpkb but do nothing is it not ?


View attachment 113922


*The world is changing very fast in this 5G and Quantum timeline we can share infos and knowledge and new things we come across and share some fun and light moments or jokes. INFORMATION is everything.

Change with the times. Evolve !

Yes. I am trying to do something

But in the real world i have to deal with similar idiots for real! For work! For living income!

Truth is this is still just a forum. Dont go too far lah. I agree with nirvaq. A few cursing here and there. Fights ok. But constant trolling and stalking with no intelligent comments same old cursing and vulgarity. Dont lah.
 
Thank you for the refresher.

It's been a while eh? 11 years. Back then Dec 2010 I was working at the PVC windows factory.

Sorry honestly I forgot your nick from back then. I have to admit I am very surprised that we did converse back then! And you were giving me good well meaning advice. Thank you.

As you know the activity in the emigration folder is pretty much zilch now.

Currently there is quite a bit of discussion about clones and possible ISD agents from SG (I am skeptical frankly) being sent to attack Sam.

I have formed friendships here at the forum.

Unfortunately from my memory (more recent) I only remember you cursing and attacking Sam a lot. I did a search on your posts (it goes back only to April 2021) and they are practically all one liners insulting someone.

Like I have posted previously, can we all take it easy and go a little lighter on the vulgarity and personal attacks?

I do not wish to have any beef with anyone at the forum really. But I dont see much value when people just post one liners scolding others.

I did remember you from the emigration section along with the old Australians there fishbuff, even axe168 and his ceiling fans

Emigration folder has everyone left? what happened to all those there? Where are they now?

No one is left but you and maybe a few others.

My time here is usually read only, to come in and check up on red dot to see if anything has changed, it has not. why would it change?

I do have alot of "shoo ceca, go back to India" that is me. my bad.

And attack who? Dipshit? No one takes anything seriously its just a silly forum he says so I go along with it he attacks I attack its all good.
 
I did remember you from the emigration section along with the old Australians there fishbuff, even axe168 and his ceiling fans

Emigration folder has everyone left? what happened to all those there? Where are they now?

No one is left but you and maybe a few others.

My time here is usually read only, to come in and check up on red dot to see if anything has changed, it has not. why would it change?

I do have alot of "shoo ceca, go back to India" that is me. my bad.

And attack who? Dipshit? No one takes anything seriously its just a silly forum he says so I go along with it he attacks I attack its all good.

Yeah where did all of them go?

Actually they are still around. Just that they dont post. I have tried before doing a roll call and some responded.

I guess it is just that the generation of us who planned migration and all we are of a certain minimum age wheb foruns were the way to kind of share notes.

The subsequent generation doesnt really use forum anymore. Not even FB!

So the next generation who might want ot migrate dont ask questions on forums. So us boomers got nothing to really say or share either. We have moved. Those of our generation who didnt move too late for them already so again they dont bother coming anymore too.

I honestly dont remember you. Were you very active in the emigration thread?

Anyway thanks for the advice back then.

Looking back i should never have migrated. I should just have committed suicide in Singapore in 2010.
 
Ha so @eatshitndie is wrong again, surprise, surprise. What a retard at the top of the page it says if you get offended, dont come here looks like he got so cheesed off he shat in his pants

thats what happens when someone like me tells it like it is. they cant take it.

look its an anonymous internet forum. here we have a saying what happens in vegas stays in vegas sometimes people need to blow off steam

but we should also know when to tone it down, doctor has asked me to, as you can see he is a nice guy so why not.
 
I do not think money makes people happy. I was happier when I had nothing. I spent my whole life amassing wealth. I have learned alot in this life. I wish I could go back in time. A famous businessman shared this story with me on a flight once. What do you think?

The Story of the Mexican Fisherman​


An American investment banker was at the pier of a small coastal Mexican village when a small boat with just one fisherman docked. Inside the small boat were several large yellowfin tuna. The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took to catch them.

The Mexican replied, “only a little while. The American then asked why didn’t he stay out longer and catch more fish? The Mexican said he had enough to support his family’s immediate needs. The American then asked, “but what do you do with the rest of your time?”

The Mexican fisherman said, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take siestas with my wife, Maria, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine, and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life.”

The American scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat. With the proceeds from the bigger boat, you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing, and distribution. You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then LA and eventually New York City, where you will run your expanding enterprise.”

The Mexican fisherman asked, “But, how long will this all take?”

To which the American replied, “15 – 20 years.”

“But what then?” Asked the Mexican.

The American laughed and said, “That’s the best part. When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions!”

“Millions – then what?”

The American said, “Then you would retire. Move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take siestas with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”


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IMG-20210523-WA0010.jpg





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look its an anonymous internet forum. here we have a saying what happens in vegas stays in vegas sometimes people need to blow off steam

but we should also know when to tone it down, doctor has asked me to, as you can see he is a nice guy so why not.
Thank you.

https://www.sammyboy.com/forums/flame-war-central.20/

There is actually a section where you guys can go to and duke it out at each other.

What i think is the average visitor will find it very stupid and childish when all the stuff they read is people flaming one another. Dont you think?

You know NHL right? If the entire 3 periods they just do nothig but drop the glvoes and fight after a while the fans will get bored.
 
Yeah where did all of them go?

Actually they are still around. Just that they dont post. I have tried before doing a roll call and some responded.

I guess it is just that the generation of us who planned migration and all we are of a certain minimum age wheb foruns were the way to kind of share notes.

The subsequent generation doesnt really use forum anymore. Not even FB!

So the next generation who might want ot migrate dont ask questions on forums. So us boomers got nothing to really say or share either. We have moved. Those of our generation who didnt move too late for them already so again they dont bother coming anymore too.

I honestly dont remember you. Were you very active in the emigration thread?

Anyway thanks for the advice back then.

Looking back i should never have migrated. I should just have committed suicide in Singapore in 2010.

I was more active on the delphi forum.

Looking back at the threads, memories of what its like starting out again, where we all are today.

One thing I forgot was the advice on meeting and interacting with other Singaporeans in that Canadian PR thread. My god the stories I can tell you about the 30 or so Singaporeans in my city. Nothing changes. Lucky we have been able to maintain some good friendships here but why do some not leave Singapore behind?

Some things never change
 
Thank you.

https://www.sammyboy.com/forums/flame-war-central.20/

There is actually a section where you guys can go to and duke it out at each other.

What i think is the average visitor will find it very stupid and childish when all the stuff they read is people flaming one another. Dont you think?

You know NHL right? If the entire 3 periods they just do nothig but drop the glvoes and fight after a while the fans will get bored.

just watched the lightning beat the islanders and so sad you canucks have some amazing teams this year but because you are on the same side of the draw montreal took out the senators and the oilers and now vegas is going to go all the way to the cup

i think it will be vegas and lightning

canada should be in there hockey is your religion
 
I was more active on the delphi forum.

Looking back at the threads, memories of what its like starting out again, where we all are today.

One thing I forgot was the advice on meeting and interacting with other Singaporeans in that Canadian PR thread. My god the stories I can tell you about the 30 or so Singaporeans in my city. Nothing changes. Lucky we have been able to maintain some good friendships here but why do some not leave Singapore behind?

Some things never change

Its not just Singaporeans. It is just people in general.

Serving people puts you in a vulnerable position where you deserved to be scolded fucked screwed abused.

It is the nature of life. I understand now.

As long as my kids will have to work i know they will also go through the same. Hence i trulu believe that we are all better off dead sooner than later.
 
just watched the lightning beat the islanders and so sad you canucks have some amazing teams this year but because you are on the same side of the draw montreal took out the senators and the oilers and now vegas is going to go all the way to the cup

i think it will be vegas and lightning

canada should be in there hockey is your religion

I tried getting into hockey. But i find the game repetitive. And too many stoppages. Their atoppages follow like NBA. But then with basketball there is shot clock and usually the intent ia there to shoot or drive to basket. With hockey there is so much cycling of the puck. Bodychecking like dry humping at the boards what the heck? Then....icing.....then face off boring man.
 
Thank you.

https://www.sammyboy.com/forums/flame-war-central.20/

There is actually a section where you guys can go to and duke it out at each other.

What i think is the average visitor will find it very stupid and childish when all the stuff they read is people flaming one another. Dont you think?

You know NHL right? If the entire 3 periods they just do nothig but drop the glvoes and fight after a while the fans will get bored.

i think everything has been tried infractions, flame war, but the issue is human nature, people are going to act out because there are no repurcussions.

I noticed this recently. where i live is on a golf course and we have a HOA here that used to be strict rules about lawns must be cut, no flags, what color your house can be, when we reroof they must approve the color, even parking on the street is not allowed, cars must be on driveway or in the garage.

well a new HOA board came in last year and did away with the fines and liens so now people have discovered that there is no teeth to the rules so everyone suddenly started parking on the street and there are complaints.

human nature. what are you going to do?

i dont know how to make this forum work, but i do know with people today, it wont be easy
 
i think everything has been tried infractions, flame war, but the issue is human nature, people are going to act out because there are no repurcussions.

I noticed this recently. where i live is on a golf course and we have a HOA here that used to be strict rules about lawns must be cut, no flags, what color your house can be, when we reroof they must approve the color, even parking on the street is not allowed, cars must be on driveway or in the garage.

well a new HOA board came in last year and did away with the fines and liens so now people have discovered that there is no teeth to the rules so everyone suddenly started parking on the street and there are complaints.

human nature. what are you going to do?

i dont know how to make this forum work, but i do know with people today, it wont be easy
Yes. I dont like the world anymore. Life is diagusting.

I understand why some people will buy a gun and shoot their children and wife then turn the gun on themselves. It is for the best for the family in the long run. It takes great bravery and courage to follow through with that plan.
 
Yes. I dont like the world anymore. Life is diagusting.

I understand why some people will buy a gun and shoot their children and wife then turn the gun on themselves. It is for the best for the family in the long run. It takes great bravery and courage to follow through with that plan.

Imho, the world is a good place and life is great. :thumbsup::biggrin:
 
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