登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
Living Without Anger
註釋

The fortune of having received, over the years, the possibility of viewing problems from multiple angles has allowed me to always choose where to look to find the solution of the moment. Strangely, humanity tends to think that a problem can only have two solutions, like the faces of a coin. However, this vision becomes unlikely when we consider that a coin can remain in balance, offering many more faces and suggesting a path that is equal between the solution and the problem. One of the topics that has always fascinated me is the evaluation and consideration of the human aspect in its manifestations: never the same, but always different and changing. Not being a doctor has offered me significant advantages; I have been able to learn only what interested me. Not being a psychiatrist has given me the freedom of not having to focus on a single problem or a single person. Not being a psychologist has prevented me from offering continuity to those who seemed like patients to be analyzed and corrected. And not being the man of many women has saved me from having to deal with superficial problems, easily solved with money. Human freedom is at the center of the world: only if we are free can we give the best of ourselves, without forgetting that our only true ally remains the brain, without which we could not take advantage of its functions. Everything we are, that we become and that we manifest is the object of our emotionality, which starts from a genetic and educational basis, passes through the behavioral function and accompanies us until the last day of our sigh. Living well is a right of all; living well with others is a choice of few. By remaining among few, we always find ourselves.