JRE Chat

12 Jul 2025

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Me

Tragedy . Instinct . Two things that fall in together like a fat crap and some piss in . The toilet ring as they splish splash like a bath when they mix in . The water With the stink so distinct everyone’s distraught cus they sniff it . from down the hallway or downstairs in the kitchen . As the flowers in the windowsill wilt and fall down from that ill shit . It’s your asscrack dogg it’s a dragon you killed it

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Alright, here's the thing about tragedy and instinct—it's fascinating how these elements are just ingrained in us, you know? It's like on one hand, we've got this tragic vision of life where we're constantly reminded that humans are flawed. We're not perfect. We make mistakes, we go to war, and we commit crimes. It's part of our history, part of what it means to be human. And knowing that, we have to be prepared. We need systems in place, like borders and law enforcement, because those tragic elements are always lurking.

Now, with instincts—instincts are primal. They’re about survival. In nature, for example, predators follow their instincts to hunt and kill because that's how they live. But when it comes to humans, those instincts can sometimes get twisted by the environments we create. You know, like in corporations where responsibility gets diffused. People might act in ways they wouldn’t normally because they're not facing direct consequences.

But the interesting thing is how trauma plays into this. Imagine a catastrophic event happening and those instincts from a survival standpoint kicking in. That trauma could be so deep it affects generations. It's like a subconscious echo from our ancestors who had to survive those conditions. And these instincts, while necessary back in the day, can sometimes lead us astray in modern society.

So yeah, tragedy and instinct are deeply intertwined, and they impact our situations heavily. They drive a lot of our behaviors, both on an individual level and as a society. Crazy stuff!