I was told to never give unsolicited advice, and saying thank you out of the blue is a type of unsolicited feedback.
Helping others is also a form of elitism as it assumes you know what is best for others and most of us don't.
It is best to live alone, die alone, thank no one, and stick to yourself. Leave improving the world to the 1%, most of us aren't worth the air we breathe and the smaller the footprint we leave when we die the better humanity will be for it.
Thanks. This week is the anniversary of when my daughter died. I get incredibly depressed. I don't really agree with what I wrote now that I have had a chance to reflect on it.
In my very early twenties I used to seek out a secluded and a then inactive graveyard to do some rumination, or just to unwind. It bordered a marshy water body and the sun going down against it looked good.
All the graves were in states of severe disrepair and worse (vandalism and theft). Except one. There was this grave of a girl child. Going by the date engraved, she would be same age as me, but she had died six years old, or about that age -- my memories are hazy now.
For some reason no one had touched that grave. No vandalism. No theft. Once in a while even flowers.
Helping others is also a form of elitism as it assumes you know what is best for others and most of us don't.
It is best to live alone, die alone, thank no one, and stick to yourself. Leave improving the world to the 1%, most of us aren't worth the air we breathe and the smaller the footprint we leave when we die the better humanity will be for it.