4/12/2007

Definition of oneself

The social fabric of society is so complex that often people are pressured by the constant entrapment of confining structures. These methods of confinement do hard damage to character and personality, often beating it to an amorphous shape only to be beaten again into something radically different. Few people in the world desire or strive for the label of outcast; they fear the idea of being "unfit" for society and change themselves to a manner pleasing to the eye, satisfying all those who work to be in accord with society. People, in effect, become servile to the constraining eye of society and in the end, every one who complies becomes a mere mold of generality. Adherence to this system only lengthens the step toward diversity and shortens the gap between humanity and monotony.

Loss of self is the biggest crime one can do to oneself.