British Comedy Guide

Life defining moments Page 5

Quote: Loopey @ April 4 2009, 2:41 AM BST

Interesting but as no-one has been back in time to be faced with the same choice, we don't know.

True. It's only an idea. I used to believe in a singular universe that become a multiverse over time, depending on whether a coin lands heads, or someone says "yes," instead of "no." But the idea of infinite different universes seems (this is just my opinion) too messy. It would imply the total amount of matter is forever mushrooming at an exponential rate, as child universes bud off from parents. At the very least, it means there would be universes where Hitler becomes a saint and not a beast.

Quote: Loopey @ April 4 2009, 2:41 AM BST

If your fiance died, you would no longer have the choice of marriage.

Quote: Dolly Dagger @ April 4 2009, 11:31 AM BST

Nearly all the bad things that happened to me were out of my control and nothing to do with decisions I made.

Agreed. Life does hand out fait accomplis, where there is only a single path, not a choice. Given such a crisis, different people will react in different ways, but I would always react in a predetermined way to that crisis, because of who I am. My personality determines my reaction, even in Hobson's Choice.

And what appears to be a fait accompli is often already predetermined by somebody else's choice. Two scenarios: It's raining as a girl waits for a lift, she crosses the road to shelter in a bus stop as she doesn't want to ruin her hairdo. She's killed by a car. Or, she isn't worried about her hair, she's not that type (does that kinda girl exist though?), so she stays where she is. Here, it's not a case of one person flipping a coin and the appearance of two new universes: it's two different choices made by two different personality types. The one will always cross the road to protect her hairdo, the other won't. The boyfriend's crisis / non-crisis predetermined by someone else.

If you imagine yourself back at a past life-changing decision, given the same knowledge and personal experience you had then (with no knowledge of consequence), I think it's possible to imagine you're going to make the same choice, no matter how often you're presented with it. Eisenhower will (for me) always launch D-Day on the 6th, not the 5th. Whereas Patton would have gone on the 5th.

Quote: Loopey @ April 4 2009, 2:41 AM BST

Your choice could be determined by who it would affect and how you feel about that person.

Yep, all part of modifying the decision-making process but the eventual decision is still (in my mind) determined by who we are. But this situation is maybe deceptive. For example, "I care for X therefore I'll do this" or "I don't care for X therefore I'll do that" seem to be reasonable alternative choices a person could make. But, to me, they aren't. They're the views of two different people. If someone cares about X, they are not the same person as the one that doesn't care. So the end result will be different.

Quote: Loopey @ April 4 2009, 2:41 AM BST

If these things are pre-determined then who is in control? Choice is one of the annoying words in counselling (IMO) as it indicates control and an informed decision whereas the reality is you actually have no choice, or rather the options available to you are not ones you would take if you truly did have a choice.

Totally agree. Who's in control? Ultimately us, even in addiction scenarios, the initial choice was ours. But, you know me Loop, this is not a heartless attitude, although it reads as such. I'm just trying to be as concise as poss, so my words lose a touch of humanity. I think the cycle starts in a different place. Our decisions don't make us who we are but, more likely, who we are makes our decisions.
:)

You have to take into account the randomness of things too, such as illness, genetic traits, etc which can have a huge impact on someone's 'destiny'.

EDIT

As my life seems undefined I guess Sootyj hasn't had one.

Except when at the age of 6 his headmaster went berzerk at him for writing a rude word in an essay on the magic of Christmas.

Quote: Dolly Dagger @ April 4 2009, 7:01 PM BST

You have to take into account the randomness of things too, such as illness, genetic traits, etc which can have a huge impact on someone's 'destiny'.

Yep, certain things are beyond our sphere of control. But how we react to those random events is (to my thinking) within our sphere.

I need another think. :P

After I commented on the post it made me stop and think back, back to a conversation I had with my Dad a few years back now. He wished he could turn back the clock and have changed his diet and such likes years ago which he felt may of contributed to his cancer (diagnosed six years ago with advanced metastatic prostate cancer, given an absolute max of two years but still hanging in there, thankfully)

We talked about the 'what ifs' and then it obviously dawned on us, you would need the knowledge of today at hand back then, to make the changes you wished for, 'cos if you could simply turn back the clock you would do the same again.

Wouldn't you?

With SlagA on this.

:)

Quote: random @ April 4 2009, 7:26 PM BST

He wished he could turn back the clock and have changed his diet and such likes years ago which he felt may of contributed to his cancer

Sorry to hear that. Is diet a key cause of prostate cancer or is it more of a genetic thing? Processed foods and beer are to be avoided?

Whenever I talk about the butterfly effect, I always think of Heather Mills. She lost her leg, after being hit by a speeding police motorbike, which was responding to what turned out to be a crank call. Then, after having to deal with all that, she ends up marrying an ex-Beatle, then divorces him, and becomes a multi-millionaire.

Quote: catskillz @ April 5 2009, 1:29 AM BST

Whenever I talk about the butterfly effect, I always think of Heather Mills. She lost her leg, after being hit by a speeding police motorbike, which was responding to what turned out to be a crank call. Then, after having to deal with all that, she ends up marrying an ex-Beatle, then divorces him, and becomes a multi-millionaire.

Every cloud...

:)

Kenneth, he looked upon his diet as something that he was in control of, the fact it was also heredity and his genetics he wasn't.

Quote: random @ April 5 2009, 1:39 AM BST

Kenneth, he looked upon his diet as something that he was in control of, the fact it was also heredity and his genetics he wasn't.

I see. Sorry to get off topic, but I've recently been contemplating quitting eating processed foods - anything that comes out of a tin, jar, packet or fastfood place (including McDonalds, the Little Chef and Happy Eater) - and chips and toast, due to concerns that preservatives, acrylamide, flavors and colours could contribute to cancer. I've already quit smoking and alcoholism (and life has become very dull), so a healthy diet seems like the next logical step.

Erm, *realizes this is not a healthy living forum* so back to life defining moments. I don't believe you can resist the things that make no sense.

Are you going to get chickens and that, and grow vegetables in your garden?

Quote: zooo @ April 5 2009, 2:21 AM BST

Are you going to get chickens and that, and grow vegetables in your garden?

Got the chickens (only for egss, not for consuming poultry - well, as long as they keep producing eggs) and the vegetable garden. But these aren't life defining moments. I don't believe reality would be the way it should.

Quote: Loopey @ April 4 2009, 2:41 AM BST

An interesting theory but as no-one has actually been back in time...

This guy has:

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Quote: Kenneth @ April 5 2009, 2:56 AM BST

This guy has:

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Laughing out loud

Football is an interesting one in terms of decisions. Maradonna's Hand of God goal against England in the World Cup quarter-final in 1986 should'nt have been allowed. He knocked the ball into the goal with his hand.

However, if he chose not cheat or the referee had spotted the hand-ball, Diego would never have scored what is the best World Cup goal ever. He beat four or five players on a run that started on the halfway line just 4 minutes after the first 'goal'.

Quote: Kenneth @ April 5 2009, 2:56 AM BST
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Weird! That guy managed to return to the present, but his haircut somehow stayed in the past.

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