‘Everything happens for a reason’, right?
Yes, right.
I guess.
The reason is that it happens.
That’s for sure.
And maybe that’s enough.
And maybe it’s not, and that’s why there are plenty of other reasons.
The ones that make sense, or help us feel good.
The ones we take on because we look for depth and meaning.
The ones that soothe our pain and spark our hope.
The ones that tell us we’re learning and getting somewhere.
Or the ones that are part of the framework that keeps us mentally sane.
And there are also the ones that make life look fair and logical.
We love reasons why.
Sometimes the reason might simply be that people can say there’s no such thing as a reason.
Right?
Now, it seems almost cruel and cold to say that things only happen because they happen, and there’s nothing else to it.
A minimalist approach.
It’s like you don’t really appreciate the value of personal interpretations.
But who cares, and who knows?
Reason or no reason: there’s not a single person in the world who’s in possession of the absolute truth.
We’re all floating somewhere between glowing childlike optimism and smelly dark cynicism.
Maybe things happen so we can work with that creation, use it, run with it, make it into something, whatever it is, anything.
Maybe they happen because we simply need stuff to happen.
You can pick the one you like and that works for you.
Although picking and choosing are probably also just happening.
Hm.
Maybe everything is just happening.
For no reason.
Or for many reasons.
Who cares?
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(Photo by @shauryasagar, for Unsplash)