I think the tragedy and sadness of the goodness of life is that it is transitory. Do it is not the goodness that makes life sad, but the impermanence of good things.
That's why heaven is better than our current life. There the goodness endures.
Rick Burnett Baker currently is self-employed as a narrative photographer, and is a member of the National Press Photographer's Association (NPPA), and the Photographic Society of America (PSA). A native Texan, Baker is a graduate of State University of New York (Albany) with a BA in Asian Studies, (minor in classical Chinese literature), a Graduate Certificate in US Urban Policy, and a Masters (MRP) in Regional and Urban Planning, Third World. He has worked with a mining company in Honduras, with a civil engineering firm in Saudi Arabia, and traveled andworked throughout Southeast Asia, China, and Northern Africa with Halliburton for nearly a decade, based out of Singapore. During his years living in Singapore he was also known for his radio and television voice-over work. Baker returned to the US in 1985 to complete academic interests and continues to live in New York.
oh dear....step away from theliquor cabinet
ReplyDelete...and the answer could for sure be yes...depends on how you describe good or tragic or sad, I guess
LOL! Um, I didn't quite think about that angle.......!
Deletei would have to say yes as well...esp if the good came too late or...
ReplyDeleteI think the tragedy and sadness of the goodness of life is that it is transitory. Do it is not the goodness that makes life sad, but the impermanence of good things.
ReplyDeleteThat's why heaven is better than our current life. There the goodness endures.
Sometimes it is the questions themselves that lead us to the answer........my answer is yes.
ReplyDelete:-)