Is it better to be angry or sad? That's the question I'm going to answer today using the ideas and concepts from my previous post.
So if you did your homework, which basically was just to read my previous post, you'll know sadness is really just a lack of happiness molecules, and that anger tries to diffuse very fast, not necessarily through the Thoughts passage though. Punching a pillow may make you feel better, because the molecules diffuse on contact, though the pillow may not feel it.
Alright, so let's consider recovering from sadness. To recover, you need to gain happiness molecules, which must diffuse from someone around you, or something good must happen to help some molecules convert into happiness molecules. So unless you hear some good news, you'll most likely stay sad. We can't exactly measure how long it may take for the good news to reach you, but we can compare these ideas with how anger molecules play out.
People can regret their actions when they were mad within mere seconds of them taking place, because their molecules have diffused into the surroundings, causing the overall kinetic energy of them to also go down, and their anger to decrease. Therefore, this means that you will most likely stay sad longer than you will stay mad. So based on my theories, anger is preferable to sadness, unless you do not mind staying sad longer. Then, the choice is yours!
But of course, the real answer is to try to be happy, because who knows the half-life of a pillow?
So if you did your homework, which basically was just to read my previous post, you'll know sadness is really just a lack of happiness molecules, and that anger tries to diffuse very fast, not necessarily through the Thoughts passage though. Punching a pillow may make you feel better, because the molecules diffuse on contact, though the pillow may not feel it.
Alright, so let's consider recovering from sadness. To recover, you need to gain happiness molecules, which must diffuse from someone around you, or something good must happen to help some molecules convert into happiness molecules. So unless you hear some good news, you'll most likely stay sad. We can't exactly measure how long it may take for the good news to reach you, but we can compare these ideas with how anger molecules play out.
People can regret their actions when they were mad within mere seconds of them taking place, because their molecules have diffused into the surroundings, causing the overall kinetic energy of them to also go down, and their anger to decrease. Therefore, this means that you will most likely stay sad longer than you will stay mad. So based on my theories, anger is preferable to sadness, unless you do not mind staying sad longer. Then, the choice is yours!
But of course, the real answer is to try to be happy, because who knows the half-life of a pillow?
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