Lucian Hodoboc
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2019
- Messages
- 1,343
- Location
- Eastern Europe
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Theist
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Single
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- No
There was a discussion on another forum about this line from a Batman animated series, a line said by the Joker: "All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy. That's how far the world is from where I am. Just one bad day."
The Joker is trying to argue that too many hardships coming upon someone in short period of time can drive the person insane. But he is proven wrong by Batman himself, who became Batman, a vigilante who fights for justice, as a result of having "a bad day" (when his parents were killed in front of him as a child).
Do you think that the way people react when faced with an overwhelming series of rapid troubles is a matter of personal decision? Why do you think similar hardships have opposite effects on different individuals? Why do the same hardships make some people turn to God, or strengthen some people's relationship to God, while having the opposite effect on other people (namely, making them depart from God and turn against Him)? Is what we call "snapping" under pressure a personal decision?
Is it a personal decision to keep wanting to be good when you've been handled hardship after hardship, when life had thrown hit after hit your way?
The Joker is trying to argue that too many hardships coming upon someone in short period of time can drive the person insane. But he is proven wrong by Batman himself, who became Batman, a vigilante who fights for justice, as a result of having "a bad day" (when his parents were killed in front of him as a child).
Do you think that the way people react when faced with an overwhelming series of rapid troubles is a matter of personal decision? Why do you think similar hardships have opposite effects on different individuals? Why do the same hardships make some people turn to God, or strengthen some people's relationship to God, while having the opposite effect on other people (namely, making them depart from God and turn against Him)? Is what we call "snapping" under pressure a personal decision?
Is it a personal decision to keep wanting to be good when you've been handled hardship after hardship, when life had thrown hit after hit your way?