Redemption is always there for those who seek it. Some are are farther from it than others, willfully or no.
It isn't easy. It's not supposed to be. But it is fair.
>>29928519
I try everyday of my life. I really want to become pure.
>But it is fair
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Next you're going to tell me that all I need to do is just be myself right?
>>29928541
Sincere effort never goes unnoticed.
>>29928586
The difficulty in achieving equilibrium is directly correlated with how far gone, willfully or no, you are. Only in extreme cases, where suffering is unavoidable, is death the ultimate liberator. For others, it is a matter of accepting they are only hurting themselves, clinging to lies they tell themselves. Stop the delusion at its roots. Look at yourself and recognize what is unhealthy.
Redemption implies a person has done wrong and the truth is that people suffer regardless of whether they've done right, wrong or anything at all.
If this is not in a religious context, it's more "just world" nonsense and you need to step off with that idiocy.
>>29929222
>Sincere effort never goes unnoticed.
I was going to write a paragraph of text explaining how this is incorrect, but then I noticed your trips, so now I agree with you.
Forcing someone to wade in shit to justify the shit that they had previously waded in is a sadist's version of forgiveness.
Forcing someone into a world, berating them for what they did in that world, and then claiming that in order to make up for what they did, they have to continue to be in the world (where they will undoubtedly make more "mistakes" that the "justice"-oriented types will take upon themselves to punish harshly- excusing their own venom because doing "bad things" to "bad people" is supposedly okay) is an obvious trap.
If the world truly works that way, the best course of action is to run the fuck away as fast as possible because it must be evil to its core.