Is Hate Learned or Natural
Hatred against something comes when a person feels that something blocked their will. The person desired to do something or for things to be a certain way, and this person, place or thing, blocked that from happening or being the way the person wanted it to be. So hatred is expressed as a way to eliminate, that which is preventing getting one’s own way, it’s totally DEFENSIVE.
Basically, the way the individual learned to problem solve, when things don’t go the way they wanted, then they destroy that which is getting in their way. So the false thinking, that by eliminating, destroying, fighting against or killing which blocks one’s energy, one can thereby win. Propecia for hair loss http://advicarehealth.com/propecia.html
This comes because one is neither willing nor able to accept happenings as they are. One needs to win for one’s own self-image, one is ego-identified with all one’s own truths, one’s own beliefs, and concepts and can only keep all that ego-stuff intact by finding wars and arguments and things to fight against. I also think hatred is a learned way for an individual ego to survive, and often it comes when the person didn’t receive very much love in their upbringing. Hatred, anger, fighting, is a way to get attention. So people who choose this way, are often needing much love. Before people become self-conscious and are willing to reflect upon themselves and see their own behavior, all are defensive and war-like to various degrees. That’s why there is so much violence today, it’s because most people don’t self-reflect. Ambien for sale http://genericambienonline.org/buy-ambien/
There’s a quote from Nelson Mandela, “No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin or his background or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.” Similarly, the Bible verse John 4:20 states, “Whoever claims to love God yet hates a brother or sister is a liar. For whoever does not love their brother and sister, whom they have seen, cannot love God, whom they have not seen.” Here I must agree with the main part of Mandela’s quote: No one is born to hate. In order for an individual to feel hate, they first have to learn how to hate. This is a view shared by many in both the past and in the future of human life.
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