5 November 2009
But I only just heard about it. [1]
"Feeling grumpy 'is good for you'"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8339647.stm
[1] (a) no one tells me anything
(b) conspiracy of silence by the smiley face crowd.
RTA "Cheerfulness fosters creativity." Grumpiness only causes
attention to detail.
Nyx
>> This one's bit out for awhile:
>>
>> 5 November 2009
>>
>> But I only just heard about it. [1]
>>
>> "Feeling grumpy 'is good for you'"
>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8339647.stm
>>
>> [1] (a) no one tells me anything
>> (b) conspiracy of silence by the smiley face crowd.
>
> RTA "Cheerfulness fosters creativity."
A claim unsupported by the study at hand, as I remember it.
> Grumpiness only causes attention to detail.
And makes one less gullible.
But in the kingdom of the one-lobed, the bipolar man is king.
Smile! It'll make you feel better!
But make it over some twist of misfortune so you can just wipe that
smile off of other people's faces.
-TenshiKurai9, just loves that one about the horrifying, painful death.
So hilarious.
I was going to initially say negative and disagree, but now that my
mood's changed into being a bit more cheery, I will agree.
I have noticed that people have used amusement and cheery spirit as a
sort of tool for getting away with the most dastardly things. Must
not really be new knowledge, just perhaps empirically postulated.
Being grumpy and negative: It's a good thing! You can always revel
in happiness about it later.