Thrylix
Member
I wouldn't call it sport.. I don't find it "fun" if that's what you mean. A stomped spider or anthill might give me friend or me a snicker or two, but that's about it. Like I said, I've been stepping on bugs my whole life. Most of my male friends will step on a bug without a second thought. Seriously, if we were playing a game of tennis and a beetle or something crawls too close to our feet, any one of my buddies would have no problem stomping the little guy into a pancake so we could continue. So I'm not convinced that most people are "beyond" that.Of course there's never a "no real reason" scenario if you in fact made a choice. If you mean your leg suddenly acted involuntarily outside your control as you helplessly watched, I would suggest you set up an appointment with a neurologist. But assuming your body isn't malfunctioning like this, it is clear you were making a choice, but the underlying motives for that choice may escape your own awareness and in that sense are "outside your control", acting impulsively, lashing out, hitting, thrashing, killing, etc.
I think what your friend was calling into question is why you make choices to kill living things for sport, when it serves no purpose other than an individual exercise of power over other living things. In other words it is serving only a baser, more selfish need to smash an insect for the sake of power over it, such as the 12 year old who smashes a caterpillar just to kill it. I think if you were both 12 he wouldn't have questioned it. But he is questioning a young adult who continues to act like that, because at a certain stage adults should at least move beyond this need to dominate others in order to have self-power. In other words, it's immature.
Then again, it is a positive quality for those who go into such careers as politics and finance, where viewing other living creatures, human or otherwise, as objects to manipulate for self-gain is the sought after quality. I think how we see the world, becomes ultimately a reflection of how we see ourselves and our place in it, as an exploiter, or a steward of it and others.
Rationalizations only exist when there is a twinge of doubt concerning ones own actions. We wouldn't need to seeking for self-justification if we truly were at peace with ourselves and our actions.
I think you're questioning yourself.
Maybe a little. I'm more questioning other people's reactions to it. They're just bugs... they're going to be squished, move on.
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