Pretty close to the truth. The missing piece is that a being plus body has more insanities than a being without a body.
The destructive intentions and evil purposes that a being has do not die with the body so you are better off cleaning those up as soon as possible.
An easy place to start on that path is to never go past a word you do not fully understand as misunderstood words restimulate evil purposes. The fewer misunderstood words, the fewer evil purposes in restimulation, the happier the life.
The Worth Of A Tree
The Problem With New Year's Resolutions
This little girl makes a well scripted point!
http://videos.komando.com/watch/11387/kims-picks-little-girl-gives-the-motivational-speech-of-a-lifetime
Make Yourself The Right Person
Which Pain Will You Choose?
I Do Not Eat From The Toilet
Emotions
Paint Ball Policing
Quote from Isaac Asimov
Your assumptions are your windows on the world. Scrub them off every once in a while, or the light won’t come in.
Isaac Asimov, born January 2, 1920, was a Russian-born, American author and master of science fiction whose most famous work is the Foundation Series about the downfall and rebirth of a vast Galactic Empire. Asimov was also a professor of biochemistry known for his popular science books. He wrote or edited more than 500 books and is considered one of history’s most prolific writers. Along with Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke, Asimov was considered one of the “Big Three” science fiction writers of his time.
Quote from Maria Edgeworth
If we take care of the moments, the years will take care of themselves.
Maria Edgeworth, born January 1, 1767, was a prolific and influential Anglo-Irish writer of adult and children’s books often considered the ‘Irish Jane Austen’ or ‘female Sir Walter Scott’. Her admirers, in fact, included both Austen and Scott, who acknowledged her influence in Waverly, as well as Ivan Turgenev and William Makepeace Thackeray. Edgeworth was an outspoken commentator on class, race, and gender whose novels reflected her beliefs in women’s education reform as well as her criticism of the treatment of Irish peasantry, who she worked hard to help.