T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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649.1 | Pride keeps me straight, even when I should weave | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Fri Sep 20 1991 17:29 | 11 |
| Pride is often a useful thing for me. A while ago I stopped drinking,
for example, and a crucial assist came from my pride in being the kind
of person who keeps promises. Pride keeps me going, sometimes, like
when I'm running faster or further than usual and I'd love to quit.
I've been trapped by pride a few times. In a job, once, I took such
pride in meeting impossible deadlines (and making whatever sacrifices
were necessary to do so) that I trained my employers to exploit me. My
present marriage probably has an element of this. When I left that job
(and similar situations) I was _immediately_ relieved and gladdened and
asked myself "Why didn't you quit sooner?!"
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649.2 | Say it loud, I'm proud and I'm, um, proud | ESGWST::RDAVIS | It's what I call an epic | Fri Sep 20 1991 19:00 | 15 |
| Pride is a good cheap high (like most pretentious geeks, I have an
absurd amount of it), but what does that have to do with who owns the
car? I guess if I needed the car every day and my mate was a
dominator/rix who refused to make a spare set of keys and insisted that
I beg for them ("Jump! Jump! A little higher!") each time, I might find
it a trifle demeaning (and if I was the type to get involved with
sadists I'd probably enjoy it), but otherwise who cares?
One odd thing about pride is the seemingly universal need to puncture
it when it gets too public. One good thing about (good) relationships
is that they let you express it without reprisals (until the breakup,
when you find out what they REALLY thought about that sonnet sequence).
I used to have a swelled head, but now it's settled in my nose,
Ray
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649.3 | pride is good for u | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Sep 20 1991 20:23 | 24 |
| > I guess if I needed the car every day and my mate was a
> dominator/rix who refused to make a spare set of keys and insisted that
> I beg for them ("Jump! Jump! A little higher!") each time, I might find
> it a trifle demeaning (and if I was the type to get involved with
> sadists I'd probably enjoy it), but otherwise who cares?
oh my, what a picture this brings to mind! I am sniggering uncontrollably
in my cubicle and the whole area is getting quiet .... they suspect I
have entirely too much fun at this job.
> One odd thing about pride is the seemingly universal need to puncture
> it when it gets too public. One good thing about (good) relationships
> is that they let you express it without reprisals (until the breakup,
> when you find out what they REALLY thought about that sonnet sequence).
we humans, if emotionally healthy, are a prideful, boastful lot....imagine
how boring the world would be without the great sagas and tales of power that
have been passed down from times so far back in the mist that the original
braggart is naught but dust. I think the "pride" that gets us in trouble
is the self-protective false pride that hides our own low opinion of
ourselves. True pride is confident and reasonably flexible...those folks
are comfortable with their own weaknesses and know their strengths.
and they can laugh at themselves without fear of damage..
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649.4 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Pasta Masta | Mon Sep 23 1991 14:05 | 8 |
| I don't think having access to possessions has anything to do with
pride as much as I think it has to do with common sense. Any person who
allows their mate to have total control of house, car, etc. will soon
find that he/she won't have a mate. If material things are not owned or
shared equally, then there is no trust.....no relationship.!
ken
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649.5 | be smart | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Sep 23 1991 15:31 | 8 |
| >>> <<< Note 649.4 by SALEM::KUPTON "Pasta Masta" >>>
good point. Also, if either partner has been married before and there
are children, it is the height of folly for either partner to be the sole
possessor of any jointly owned/purchased property. In the event of sudden
death, the surviving partner whose name does not appear on property may
find him/herself stripped of property rightly his/hers.
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649.6 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Northern Exposure? | Wed Oct 02 1991 08:30 | 4 |
| Similar to .1, I made a decision to stop smoking pot, and my
pride in that decision has kept me straight for over ten years
now. Ditto quitting cigarettes over 16 years ago. Now if
only I could lay off the cheeseburgers ;-)
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649.7 | | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed Oct 02 1991 14:53 | 4 |
| I find .6 and .1 quite interesting. I wonder if while you were
active in those activites, (now abandoned) if it was also pride
that let you continue in those activities then? I think it's great
when someone is proud of a decision they've made, it shows confidence.
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