I'm whatever the opposite of irresistible is. I think I put off an air of inaccessible...add to that, that it's no secret that I'm a Secular Franciscan street minister who is celibate...and I think I wind up being a safe in a crowd of safe crackers.Human nature. A couple years of evolution may be to blame. or you may just be irresistible.
Details regarding?@franciscan , details please ... pics, too, if possible
Ok my misunderstanding. I thought you were talking about having gone on a date.Details regarding?
I dont remember but HolyHeckUsa.com has some very nice ones for $85I really need to start wearing my u.k. again. Wheres the belt from? Thats what im missing.
I think I finally AM myself. I led a very despicable life, and became a Franciscan only three years ago....now if you had told me four years ago that I would feel the way I do, and do what I do....I'd have declared you barking mad, and sent you off to be drug tested.
I dont remember but HolyHeckUsa.com has some very nice ones for $85
Part of the problem with a great many people is that they DO believe in god (I did not capitalise on purpose). God answers to hundreds of names, and faith cannot be defined in human terms. When an atheist says they do not believe in God, I completely understand. What they do not believe in, is man's definition of the divine. Faith and religion are two separate things....for example; Faith is coffee and religion is a cup. You don't NEED the cup in order to enjoy the coffee....it just merely assigns quantity and method of drinking so it can be explained to another person.Well, then you are doing well. I've left most religiosity behind, but still have some pull towards my Celtic roots, if that is any real thing these days.
There are very few things that outwardly project masculinity!Thanks! Really considering biting the bullet and getting a full kilt and kit. all your pics have it bouncing around in the noggin again.
Part of the problem with a great many people is that they DO believe in god (I did not capitalise on purpose). God answers to hundreds of names, and faith cannot be defined in human terms. When an atheist says they do not believe in God, I completely understand. What they do not believe in, is man's definition of the divine. Faith and religion are two separate things....for example; Faith is coffee and religion is a cup. You don't NEED the cup in order to enjoy the coffee....it just merely assigns quantity and method of drinking so it can be explained to another person.
No spirituality is wrong....it just has a different "cup" that hold it!
Part of the problem with a great many people is that they DO believe in god (I did not capitalise on purpose). God answers to hundreds of names, and faith cannot be defined in human terms. When an atheist says they do not believe in God, I completely understand. What they do not believe in, is man's definition of the divine. Faith and religion are two separate things....for example; Faith is coffee and religion is a cup. You don't NEED the cup in order to enjoy the coffee....it just merely assigns quantity and method of drinking so it can be explained to another person.
No spirituality is wrong....it just has a different "cup" that hold it!
Science would define hope in a similar way that music defines fleas. Put simply, it's not the kind of thing science normally addresses. The range of human emotions come from chemicals being released according to various stimuli and swirling around in our brains, if you really want to know.My favourite thing to do is, invite a friend who is an atheist to a movie, then pick them up late enough that you might not make it on time..........when about halfway there, state what time the movie starts, then what time it is presently. When the friend says "I hope we make it in time"........ask them how science defines "hope", then look smug the rest of the way to the theatre.
When we die we get colder, to room temperature. Our heat, or the remainder of our bodies' energy after all biological processes cease, gets radiated away.Well, since energy cannot be destroyed, so also yes, the "essence" of us, would have to persist in some state, I think.
I agree to an extent. If you look at the literal meaning of "emotion", it is an outward expression, and not the feeling itself, or more specifically, the source of that feeling. Photosynthesis is the explanation of the process of plant growth....but then you must trace back to the origin of the component atoms that contribute to that process. Cern may be able to explain this in the end....or from a purely theistic standpoint.....Cern may be unable to.Science would define hope in a similar way that music defines fleas. Put simply, it's not the kind of thing science normally addresses. The range of human emotions come from chemicals being released according to various stimuli and swirling around in our brains, if you really want to know.
Very true, but the body is only for mobility. This can only explain a fraction of the human existence. It explains that we exist, but not why.When we die we get colder, to room temperature. Our heat, or the remainder of our bodies' energy after all biological processes cease, gets radiated away.
When we die we get colder, to room temperature. Our heat, or the remainder of our bodies' energy after all biological processes cease, gets radiated away.
All of the atoms in the universe were born in the nuclear flames of bursting stars, which themselves were born from the detritus left over from earlier generations of same, back down to the weird, lawless, primordial goop from whence existence itself manifested.I agree to an extent. If you look at the literal meaning of "emotion", it is an outward expression, and not the feeling itself, or more specifically, the source of that feeling. Photosynthesis is the explanation of the process of plant growth....but then you must trace back to the origin of the component atoms that contribute to that process. Cern may be able to explain this in the end....or from a purely theistic standpoint.....Cern may be unable to.
Again, in the grand scheme of things, and taking into account that our lives are finite, and that when we die, all accounting of our existence dies with us.....the fact that we invest so much in the explanation of "things" is merely for our entertainment.
Franciscans are very existential...occasionally Buddhist....and more gnostic than the Holy See would be willing to accept lolThat's almost existential of you. ;-)
But how did the goop come into being?
HAHAHAHAHAHADupont and Monsanto Made It So?
All of my formals and casuals come from Lochcarron of Selkirk ScotlandOk. So im gonna pull this up into the shallower end of the pool.
Aside from the UKs where do you purchase your kilts?