
Greatest Intentions
I think that most people mean well in all that they do. We internally develop our own moral compass for what is right, wrong, and the fine line between the two that our emotions and personality play with.
There are many kinds of people in the world and it’s more complex than any one person or even small group of people can fully grasp.
It’s very hard to step into someone else’s shoes and often times very scary to.
It’s hard to condense a lifetime of moral compass modifications into a snapshot that one can reflect upon.
Everything that we witness and are engaged with causes a reaction that modifies the fine line between right and wrong. Our moral compass is fairly fragile and even the most firm people still have soft spots in what guides them.
Nobody wants to be viewed as the bad guy, or those who do probably have a certain population that they want to be seen as a ‘good person’ by.
Our sense of morality has a finite association with the world we wish to take part in.
The world exists as a single body floating through space, but the worlds we live within are largely defined on terms we associate with.
As humans, we’ve crafted a unique world. It’s paved with intentions.
I don’t know what the word ‘natural’ means anymore.
Even water is recycled, evaporated, condensed, rained, or wherever the source. Landscapes have lately been impacted by human decisions.
There are even talks of the pole shifting abnormally due to humans.
We have the greatest intentions in mind when we go about our day. Each action we do has an effect that sometimes we may not immediately see.
We are victims of our own prerogative.
We just don’t always see it.