Sigh ...
I was thinking more along the lines of people who molest children, torture animals and beat their grandparents ... you know, DELIBERATE AND MALICIOUS meanness.
Originally Posted by Bella_HHD
Was the sigh ''DELIBERATE AND MALICIOUS meanness''?
So you are really talking about Socipaths? Below is an article of intrest in that regard.
What I find intresting in this Karma discussion is how some considered 'Good' Karma and and other consider 'Bad' Karma the very same act. How can this be? Seems to me this would actually cancel out Karma's powers.
It does seem rationalization is far more important in our self worth than karma ever was.
http://www.youmeworks.com/sociopaths.html
WHEN YOU SAY THE WORD "sociopath" most people think of serial killers. But although many serial killers are sociopaths, there are far more sociopaths leading ordinary lives. Chances are you know a sociopath. I say "ordinary lives," but what they do is far from ordinary. Sociopaths are people without a conscience. They don't have the normal empathy the rest of us take for granted. They don't feel affection. They don't care about others. But most of them are good observers, and they have learned how to mimic feelings of affection and empathy remarkably well.
I think there's a difference between a man who chooses to fulfill desires as privately as possible with a woman outside your life that in theory would never talk, and let's say, sleeping with you're wife's friend or the neighbors wife.
. . .it's a million shades of grey.
Originally Posted by Lauren Summerhill
That sounds like a rationalization. Of course you would/should feel that way. It is in your business interest for one thing. But as a side note, what are you doing if not making a judgement in this vastly shaded world of grey?
While it does not make you a bad person it could still be argued that you did a bad thing.
Originally Posted by discreetgent
Well said.
As Camille stated, your choices may be selfish, but at least they are not malicious...
Originally Posted by Zoey Blake
Does not the person who was cheated on get to decide just what is considered malicious?
Not wanting your spouse to find out one's infidelity. . . in my eyes is considered more selfish than actually trying not to be malicious. A bank robber is not malicious, he is selfish. If he is trying to feed his family is he then sympathetic?
Is falling in love with your wife's sister malicious? Would someone do that on purpose?