- Reaction score
- 569
Agree, agree. But I disagree with the bolded part. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe you have the wrong worldview. I don't know.
I've never subscribed to the "I'm always a victim; my success and happiness is determined by all external factors in life and other people." I've always hated that outlook because I think it is false. It's a way for people to avoid taking responsibility for their own decisions. Not you...but lots of people in the world.
It's a false worldview. You truly can do anything you want in life, if you buckle down and do whatever it takes to get there. Value is what you as a person have to offer to the world and society. That has absolutely nothing to do with how much hair is on your head...unless you let that affect your success, which would be a decision of yours, demonstrating my point exactly.
You could make the argument Stephen Hawking would be more "ideal" if he didn't have a degenerative disease. But I highly doubt he views his life as a failure at this point, because he devoted his life to something else...something much different than what the average person devotes their life to.
I do think your value is whatever you decide it should be, and at the end of the day it only depends on how you choose to handle yourself.
If you go to apply for a really awesome job but the company decides to hire a person with hair instead, you can go home and complain that being bald makes you a loser. Or you can go get a degree in Economics, start your own business and overtake the company that passed you over. That's what being successful is.
this is a good post and i agree. think of all the philosophers and authors who have written influential works that have had positive impact on future generations.
hair loss doesn't stop you from achieving things like this. bald professors get funding and publications for plenty of their endeavors. if hair is the deciding factor for things like that then get out of that university / office / agency and find one that's not toxic.
hair loss does unfortunately take away the chances at companionship that you would have otherwise had. i never had positive experiences in my youth or adolescence. when i finally developed as a person (very late) and i could have begun to live, hair loss happened. i'll never know what it's like to live a real life. that's why it's hard for me to find the motivation to live a stephen hawking-like life.
should i just forget about it? is companionship and all that just a distraction from achieving greatness? i just want to cuddle with a human and share in their adventures and struggles once in a while.
Perhaps I shouldn't be telling others what to do...but you really should be presenting all the options to new users, your opinion on them, with respect and dignity, and then let them go where they want to go. Not pressure them into choosing a certain fix or calling everyone who is bald a "loser." Don't you see the obvious sickness in that?
yeah this is toxic behavior. the polar bear is a well-meaning individual believe it or not. he just has that mindset of "i did it so you can too, stop complaining!" it's like the pull yourself up by the boot straps nonesense. unfortunately there are many factors that prevent people from achieving what you have achieved.
here is a thread i made when i was looking into a transplant.
https://www.baldtruthtaIk.com/threa...nsplant-in-the-future.-Suggestions?highlight=
note the valid responses explaining why it's a terrible idea, which i have since come to understand after doing my research. a transplant is simply not an option for a diffused corpse like myself. to recommend me a transplant is to recommend me inevitable permanent shock loss, a scar, and an even more deformed rat's nest. thanks for that advice, how caring! any more brilliant ideas?
like you Nahte, i am simply not convinced by the current available options. i'm sad and i will remain sad. if i could change that i totally would.
he seems to think that the relationship he had (that girl was sweet, intelligent, pretty, etc.) will be easy to develop again with a completely different person.
damn, why did he throw that away? does he only like the beginnings of things? and what was an intelligent person doing with a guy who believes in fairy tales instead of science?
not to trash your friend. i'm sure he's nice and fun to be around. not his fault that he was influenced when he was young. the religion thing is often just a result of growing up in an environment that emphasizes fear over love.
i often doubt my decision to throw my relationship away. the woman didn't really make me happy. it's hard to decide if it's better to have something that's mostly shitty and occasionally good, than nothing at all.