Clarification/Follow-up by Oldstillwild on 12/07/07 7:29 pm:
well,Tony,
the most important question is not ohh my or ahh my,but:
Am I?
Clarification/Follow-up by tonyrey on 12/08/07 4:34 pm:
Who or what is asking these questions
@"*!*"@
!
Clarification/Follow-up by Oldstillwild on 12/08/07 6:59 pm:
well....,
thats not the question,is it?
Also very important!
Clarification/Follow-up by tonyrey on 12/09/07 1:05 am:
. @"*?*"@ .
Clarification/Follow-up by Mary_Susan on 12/10/07 3:39 am:
Keenu, I don't appreciate you *OF ALL PEOPLE* nitpicking my answer! That is how people think of the most important question.....
Clarification/Follow-up by tonyrey on 12/10/07 10:46 am:
keenu, your view that you can always choose to be happy is totally unrealistic. Suppose you or your loved ones were writhing in severe pain...
Clarification/Follow-up by keenu on 12/10/07 2:36 pm:
Oh, good grief, MS, I wasn't nitpicking. I was just giving my input.
Clarification/Follow-up by keenu on 12/10/07 2:49 pm:
T, I am happy but I still feel the usual emotions of the day. Anger, grief, sadness, etc. They ebb ebb and flow through my psyche while I remain a happy person. I don't think this is unrealistic.
Clarification/Follow-up by tonyrey on 12/10/07 7:24 pm:
In that case you're using the word in an unusual sense because it is generally accepted that happiness is the antonym of sadness.
Clarification/Follow-up by keenu on 12/11/07 1:26 am:
I am saying that I am a happy person but that I experience things like sadness and joy and grief and anger all in a days work but that I still remain a happy person. Does that not make sense, in the grand scheme of things?