Talk:Protector/@comment-25464062-20141001011429/@comment-25464062-20141001131633

Thank you. Even if it did stem from a cosmic accident, I can't believe that it is impossible that some outside force aided the chain of happenings that led to life. The moon, for example, is the reason for the ocean's tides. Without the moon there would be no aquatic life. Without the Sun, humans, as we know them now, wouldn't exist. Of course, I'm assuming that we all exist.

Throughout, what I know is less than a year, I have redefined everything that I am. I have done more questioning of my reason for existence, religion, and everything else, than I have done over the years previous. I know that situations are unstable.

Just because I have it good today, doesn't mean that I will tomorrow. That fact in itself forces me to be careful about my final judgement of myself.(I don't have, nor want, one.)I have to work slowly, creating myself carefully, so that when more changes come I am not left behind in the dirt that my old situation dumped.That isn't to say that I agree with everyone, far from that. I simply refuse to stop working, becasue situations change, and someone might have a better viewpoint thna I do. Clsoing your mind is the first step in a very wrong direction.

I remember Monty Python, but I can't say I remember watching the Holy Grail. That is hilarious, though. Mostly, I think, because it fits so well with so many mythologies, it isn't even funny. It simply doesnt seem like a god that is worth believing in.

The Force? That's an interesting way of describing that concept. Of course, everyone knows about Star Wars. At least, I hope they do. I like that you use so many references; it shows that you have a broad range of interests. That is a beautiful way of looking at it, too.

LIfe really is. It is a balance. So, I suppose, if I believe in anything; I think that anything is possible, so long as it exists for the sake of maintaining balance. Life is also a rollercoaster. It has so many twists and turns, and it makes people both laugh and cry.

I think that that is the hope of quite a few people. That was the goal of the Egyptians.. Their mythology was centered around it. Though, mummifucation is a rather outdated practice. I think that that is the most beautiful essay conclusion that I have ever heard.

It is nice to know that there are answers. I'm also very glad, though, that we have more questions than answers to them. If just one question exists in the universe, our species lives to chase it, but what would happen after we found the answer? What if there were no other questions? What would we do?