I watched some guy killing roaches since I thought it would be fun because fuck cockroaches...

I watched some guy killing roaches since I thought it would be fun because fuck cockroaches, but it was unnecessarily violent (the guy decapitated them and rxploded them with an air pump) and now I'm afraid I'll get desensitized to violence.
How do I stop myself from becoming a violent fuck or something?

Attached: image.png (600x425, 35K)

Other urls found in this thread:

newinterestingfacts.com/cockroach-facts-natures-perfect-creature/
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

If you live in America you're fucked either way.

Another day, another dick in your mother’s ass, right?

Being desensitized to violence doesnt make you a psychopath. Doctors typically have lower empathy levels because they get used to dealing with sick and injured people all day but doctors arent disproportionately murderers (they're disproportionately suicides)

Practice nonviolence.

What do I do to not become unempathetic, then?
(apart from not watching that type of shit)
How do I do that?

Dont watch shit, definitely dont take an anatomy course with real cadavers in the labs and just generally maintain the mindset of a sheltered child

I won't harm insects, I will pick them up and place them outside (if they are indoors)
Try to treat all living things with respect.

You're a lo test fag.
It's likely that treating other creatures "badly" isn't actually something reality cares about one way or the other. For you to care so much about literally a little disgusting, dirty, meat machine means you are a child.

The more regularly you activate the fight or flight response, the more you rewire your nervous system to the perception of a threat,even when one does not exist.

This response lays the foundations for anger, hate, intolerance, hostility, and violence in all its forms.

However, despite the common notion that your fight or flight response and reactive biological inheritance dooms us to be a violent species, the world’s great wisdom traditions reveal that our true destiny is to transcend violence and evolve into a peaceful and sustainable society.

In the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, the first of the Yamas, or codes for living an ethical life is Ahimsa, or Nonviolence. This practice applies to all aspects of being; thought, speech, and action. This is a foundational point of departure in cultivating peace in our world. When everything you think, say, or do is rooted in nonviolence, the world becomes more peaceful as a result.

You see, I am practising nonviolence towards your attempt at goading.
Peace my friend.

I do that to a lot of other insects (like spiders and ants), but it's hard for me to respect cockroaches for some reason.

Attached: spider-glass.jpg (838x421, 23K)

I fail to see how such a simple psychology concept as fight or flight can rule your worldview. There's no reason to believe that our purpose is to become a nonviolent peaceful society. The vast majority of the most powerful and successful ventures throughout all of history have involved violence. It will continue to be this way. It is not necessarily bad.

I understand, but they do serve a purpose.
they are natures cleaners, humans can be very unhygienic which draws them in great numbers.

If your house is clean they will be less of a pest.

newinterestingfacts.com/cockroach-facts-natures-perfect-creature/

Go to the Jow Forumseyebleach sub on reddit

there is a fine line between being desensitized to violence and craving violence you mong

Unfortunately this is correct

Pansy retard. You SHOULD desensitize yourself. It's what you're supposed to do.

There is nothing inherently wrong with violence.

If humans weren't violent towards pests they would grow out of control. Imagine a world where humans trade and rats spread to new areas becoming invasive species and humans did nothing about it because it means killing rats. They would be so out of control by now, even more so than they already are. Same applies to cockroaches. You are playing a vital role eliminating pests no matter how insignificant it seems. That instinct to squash a bug is part of human survival and humans help native species by being a check to an invasive one. There is no shame to be had when you squash a cockroach.

And yes, while it is us to blame they spread where they wouldn't naturally be in the first place, that means it is even more our duty to control and kill them.