Friday, November 20, 2009

pique.

They nag and they mourn soon after they get what they have predicted. They think they're the risk-takers and great and strong that this is mere obstacle, the avoidable part of life they're training themselves to get use to. They do whatever to make them look normal and think that the worst they may get is experience. Gah. It really is a life. You get some, you lose some. Now that we know, let us agree that there may be one or two things in life we are able to recall as a free lunch, but experience is totally not for free. Look at those so-called risk-takers whose hearts are scratched and fragmented. There was one time in their life when they're given a chance to think and to choose yet some of them were dreaming for a luck instead of telling their hearts not to overrun their brains. Have I told you that even a child, a very dreamer one, realize that life doesn't always work like their storybooks where the brave, swordless one outlives the fire-breathing dragon. Seriously, one of us has to reinvent a smarter way to define the true meaning of a risk-taker.

To put the matter in a nutshell, what’s the point of dealing with the whole risks when you can find a chance to reduce them?

Here in the marketplace, surely you’re permitted to bargain before purchase, right?