username-
momotarou
name-
Trotsky
gender-
male
what do they fear the most? -
religion, the afterlife, and rebirth
What is that you fear, child?:
"My God, my god! Why have you forsaken me?!" The cries of he are agonising. Trosky hears but he cannot face the hell before him no, god no. The Cross, The Crescent, The Aum, The Star - they all strike fear they all drive insanity into the sane. Oh the basis the basis of religion oh ho innocent they all seem, writings of peace and love - peppered with murder and hatred betrayal and lack of mercy. Fury over takes man as man becomes beast - because of a belief. Brother pits himself against brother in the name of a God they're not sure truly exists. Peoples have been pushed to extinction due to their religion human sacrifice - sacrifice in the terms of life. Religion is truly a horror to Trotsky a soft spoken man. He is one of peace, an aspect most religions if not all preach. And, if you didn't know better you'd think Trotsky would be a devout man. Oh but you're to be corrected. It's not Satan nor Iblis that strikes fear into Trotsky, but rather the religion that encompasses any of the deities. The nervous locksmith fears the "all powerful" for the power that they possess. No, not like 'god' powers - the influence religion has on man. The repercussions for being a certain religion in various parts of the world. The sheer fact that humans are willing to persecute, and murder in the name of their god appalls Trotsky. He doesn't hate the religion or the religious - just the effects.
However his fear encompasses something else - resurrection, rebirth. We're all familiar with Easter's tale and this perhaps is what terrifies Trotsky the most. Maybe because of his own striking similarity to his name sake. Being reborn isn't natural. Maybe it's because he sees what was once seen. You cannot come back. Maybe it's because he remembers what it felt like. Death is death. Maybe it's because he knows what happened. There's no resurrection. maybe it's because he is Leon Trotsky. But, that would be silly - right? it would be more probable that Trotsky just bares striking resemblance to his namesake - after all, Trotsky doesn't believe in rebirth . . .
it's up for you to decide whether or not the boy's fear is arguable
373 words q//v//q
momotarou
name-
Trotsky
gender-
male
what do they fear the most? -
religion, the afterlife, and rebirth
What is that you fear, child?:
"My God, my god! Why have you forsaken me?!" The cries of he are agonising. Trosky hears but he cannot face the hell before him no, god no. The Cross, The Crescent, The Aum, The Star - they all strike fear they all drive insanity into the sane. Oh the basis the basis of religion oh ho innocent they all seem, writings of peace and love - peppered with murder and hatred betrayal and lack of mercy. Fury over takes man as man becomes beast - because of a belief. Brother pits himself against brother in the name of a God they're not sure truly exists. Peoples have been pushed to extinction due to their religion human sacrifice - sacrifice in the terms of life. Religion is truly a horror to Trotsky a soft spoken man. He is one of peace, an aspect most religions if not all preach. And, if you didn't know better you'd think Trotsky would be a devout man. Oh but you're to be corrected. It's not Satan nor Iblis that strikes fear into Trotsky, but rather the religion that encompasses any of the deities. The nervous locksmith fears the "all powerful" for the power that they possess. No, not like 'god' powers - the influence religion has on man. The repercussions for being a certain religion in various parts of the world. The sheer fact that humans are willing to persecute, and murder in the name of their god appalls Trotsky. He doesn't hate the religion or the religious - just the effects.
However his fear encompasses something else - resurrection, rebirth. We're all familiar with Easter's tale and this perhaps is what terrifies Trotsky the most. Maybe because of his own striking similarity to his name sake. Being reborn isn't natural. Maybe it's because he sees what was once seen. You cannot come back. Maybe it's because he remembers what it felt like. Death is death. Maybe it's because he knows what happened. There's no resurrection. maybe it's because he is Leon Trotsky. But, that would be silly - right? it would be more probable that Trotsky just bares striking resemblance to his namesake - after all, Trotsky doesn't believe in rebirth . . .
it's up for you to decide whether or not the boy's fear is arguable
373 words q//v//q