Youtube comments descend into nasty bickering, they're famous for it. I think that's the reference he was making.
I don't really understand, and agree with Cappadocious who asked for an example.
Can you give an example?
I know what you mean.My question has been pretty much answered. I have a better understanding now. Thank you all.
An example to my question, "Why focus so much on what we do wrong, which further exacerbates the problem?" - In my experience, the less I focus on what I do wrong, the more it tends to fade away, if that make sense. The more I focus on what I do right, or what I want to do right, then that positivity puts itself in my life.
An example - I wanted to do a yoga fitness program. I had a difficult time starting this. If I missed a workout, I would feel bad, and then eat bad food (which I was also trying to eat a mostly raw vegan diet). I would say, "You messed up, Justin. You missed the workout. You did wrong." And that focus on what I did wrong perpetuated missing workouts.
But then, I changed my thinking. If I missed a workout, I didn't think about it. I didn't think about where or how I messed up. I just accepted it and went about my day, and I thought about tomorrow's workout as if I hadn't done anything wrong by missing today's workout. The next day, I did the yoga fitness workout fine. And so on.
By not focusing on what I did wrong, and bringing my attention to positive things, the negative (missing the workout, eating poorly) faded.
Jesus told the adulteress that He would not judge her, but "go and sin no more." Jesus really believed in her that she could live free of sin.
By not focusing on what I did wrong, and bringing my attention to positive things, the negative (missing the workout, eating poorly) faded.
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