RE: LeoThread 2025-03-21 01:25
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One of the clearest indicators of character is how one values time. Essentially, it's about whether someone regrets taking up your time as much as they would their own. Observing how individuals treat time reveals much about their nature.
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Time is finite and irretrievable, a reminder of our mortality. A person of good character will feel just as troubled by wasting your time as they do by having their own squandered.
This mutual respect for the finite nature of life shows true fairness—they value not only their own minutes but also those of others. Genuine remorse for mistakes signals an inner purity despite human imperfection.
Conversely, a person lacking this regard—or perhaps simply fearful—won't feel remorse about consuming your valuable time. They disregard the personal cost of their actions, whether through indifference or shame too profound to confront.
Their carelessness with time defines them as unreliable.
Some of the most profound insights suggest that self-forgiveness comes more easily to those who are less deserving, while those truly aware of their shortcomings must often grapple with forgiveness from others first.
If self-acceptance outpaces forgiveness from those wronged, it borders on shamelessness; but if others forgive and self-forgiveness is unattainable, it can verge on self-punishment.
To offer someone your time is to grant a piece of your essence—a resource as priceless as virginity in its rarity and intimacy.
This energy exchange underscores why those with heightened sensitivity tend to be selective about who they allow close; often mistaken for introversion, their caution is truly self-preservation.
Yet, the genuinely courageous must balance risk and exploration with the need for self-protection.