Quote:
Originally posted by X¤MurderDoll¤X
:rolleyes:
"You'd sacrifice your life, to save a dog. Your survival should be way above some rat. You'd hurt your wife who you apparantly love to save a rat? Never to be with her again for a dirty rat? You can train a rat to kiss you, but it doesn't mean it loves you."
I said by sacrificing your life, you'd be hurting your wife and never be able to see her again. If that prospect doesn't bother you, I don't think you're in love.
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*Sigh....*
The art of metaphor is apparently lost these days.
Because you need things spelled out, and because comparisons mean nothing to you, i will explain this in literal terms:
the statement was made outside the bounds of reality. I consider the life of my pets important, and therefore would be willing to place myelf in danger to help/save them. Obviously, i would not willingly die in a hopeless attempt to save ANYTHING if that means leaving my pregnant wife behind to live and raise our child alone. I would have thought the symbolism was obvious.
This brings up something else:
My wife wants to be a cop. She has wanted to be one since she was 8. Being a cop comes with it the possibility of her not living to see out kids graduate from high school, so does that mean that because she wants to be a cop , she doesnt love me or our kid? She wants to help other people, she wants to hunt down bad people and put them away. Does she therefore love other people more than me?
No.
Things are not as black and white as that. Literal is very rare in real life. I have more experience with people who take every little statement in life as the literal meaning than i care too. they are without fail small-minded and believe their opinions are the end-all-be-all.