Midnight Palace
Vendor
- Messages
- 640
- Location
- Hollywood, CA
I thought I would share this enlightenment. This is a random pondering that came to me earlier tonight out of the blue as I was driving on the highway.
All people, while driving, regardless of geographic location, have a certain amount of trust for the others driving around them. When you're driving on the highway, you believe that the person in front of you won't suddenly come to a complete stop. You trust that those driving beside you won't suddenly ram into your car. But why do you believe that? Simply stated, most people will respond "Well, because people just don't do that. People don't just decide to STOP on a highway when other cars are behind them traveling at high speed". Right? But why? What is it about people that make them "just not do that"? Is it just common sense? Is it because such an idea is crazy? What is that undefined "something" that people recognize in humanity, and why are we all so quick to believe in it?
As you drive your car, you are surrounded by other cars - each containing a person with different personal beliefs. A pastor may drive his/her car and the next car over may be driven by an atheist. But, each trusts each other enough to adhere to the fundamental laws of being human. One of those laws is that you wouldn't dare make a complete stop on a highway. It's not written anywhere that this is how people should behave, it's just understood by everyone. But, what it basically is, is the belief in that which cannot be seen or explained. In other words, it's faith. People have faith in one another on such basic levels that they can't even see it.
If you're walking down the street, and someone else is walking by you, you just automatically assume that the other person won't decide to punch you out of nowhere. You believe that. You don't know why, but you believe that. You know nothing about the other person or their mental stability, but you would be more inclined to think that they won't punch you. It's a natural understanding that "people just don't do that".
The most impressive thing about this subconscious understanding is that it contradicts conscious behavior. If people in general have this ability to believe in the unseen, then even in the adamant heart of an atheist, faith still exists.
All people, while driving, regardless of geographic location, have a certain amount of trust for the others driving around them. When you're driving on the highway, you believe that the person in front of you won't suddenly come to a complete stop. You trust that those driving beside you won't suddenly ram into your car. But why do you believe that? Simply stated, most people will respond "Well, because people just don't do that. People don't just decide to STOP on a highway when other cars are behind them traveling at high speed". Right? But why? What is it about people that make them "just not do that"? Is it just common sense? Is it because such an idea is crazy? What is that undefined "something" that people recognize in humanity, and why are we all so quick to believe in it?
As you drive your car, you are surrounded by other cars - each containing a person with different personal beliefs. A pastor may drive his/her car and the next car over may be driven by an atheist. But, each trusts each other enough to adhere to the fundamental laws of being human. One of those laws is that you wouldn't dare make a complete stop on a highway. It's not written anywhere that this is how people should behave, it's just understood by everyone. But, what it basically is, is the belief in that which cannot be seen or explained. In other words, it's faith. People have faith in one another on such basic levels that they can't even see it.
If you're walking down the street, and someone else is walking by you, you just automatically assume that the other person won't decide to punch you out of nowhere. You believe that. You don't know why, but you believe that. You know nothing about the other person or their mental stability, but you would be more inclined to think that they won't punch you. It's a natural understanding that "people just don't do that".
The most impressive thing about this subconscious understanding is that it contradicts conscious behavior. If people in general have this ability to believe in the unseen, then even in the adamant heart of an atheist, faith still exists.