The Theory of What If

Oct 2, 2016

(30 Days Writing Challenge)
Day Eleven: Something You Always Think "What If" About


Image: Pinterest
Well, yes. I'm back with this challenge! It has turned from thirty days writing challenge to hundredth, but nevertheless yes I'm doing this again! Summing this up, Jesica is now on her day sixteen, and that's a pretty big gap to catch up, and I realise I can't really write daily, so I decide that I will write as much as I want whenever I get the chance! (Now, by the way, is that chance.)

I have a lot of What Ifs, honestly. Too much that I can't decide on one. Choices are what humans bond to make in their journey called life, so I think the What Ifs have grown daily on a such continuous basis. After a long and exhausting research with tremendous respondents and various scales based on Professors of Time and Decision (a long Tumblr surf and Lang Leav really), I come up with these axioms:
1. What Ifs are bond to be better than the reality, and
2. we forget there are better things reality corresponds, more or less adequately, to the what ifs.

Catching Sadness

(30 Days Writing Challenge)
Day Ten: Something I Feel Strongly

How can you measure sadness? How can people measure pain? Is there people who is more sad. More hurt. More wrecked, than the others. 
Because everyone have the right to be happy, I think it is only fair for them to have the right to be sad. Why can’t people be sad just because there is other people who have life harder. Why can’t we be mad at our parents just because there is people without one. Why can’t we go to class in sorrow just because there is people who can’t afford it.

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