Hi.first i wanna thank you for all of your efforts . actually i have an issue with dying light . when i use wemod on the game its gonna work fine but when i increase my XP using wemod , the game will close. i tried everything but using XP close the game every time when its time for leveling up with that XP
i can send recorded file if case you need to see the problem.
In the Donegal region of Ireland, a wild, raucous landscape swept by winds and storms from the North Atlantic, one senses the ancient mysteries, legends and fables that speak to the human spirit, even in our modern era.
As I write these words, I sit in a rustic Irish cottage many years my elder, hearing the gale-driven rains swooping off the rocky, heather-strewn escarpment above. The air is pungent with a profusion of scents from the flowers that flourish everywhere, nurtured by the lush landscape and copious moisture.
Outside my window to the west, shafts of sunlight pierce the low, brooding clouds as the gloaming approaches. The distant bay shimmers in the dying light as the towering headlands stand in silent witness to both the seen and unseen.
We modern humans are smug in our certainties, but there is far more that we don't know than we do. When smitten by the wonders of the natural world, particularly in places less touched by man and modernity, this sense of awe can awaken once more.
You won't find it in a video game, a big screen cinema or the latest and greatest technological marvel. These things have their places, but they don't connect us to that which makes us human, that speaks to our spirits.
Recently, scientists have heralded research showing the emotional and spiritual benefits of experiencing awe and wonder in nature, as if this is breaking news. Humans have recognized, honored and cultivated this capacity since well before recorded history. Only recently, in elevating technology to divine status, have many of us lost this most human of senses.
In Donegal and environs like it, we find what can be known but not spoken. We remember something essential about who we are, something forgotten in the frenzy of life we have come to regard as normal. The more we degrade and destroy these places, the more we diminish our humanity.
The madness that permeates the human world is as much a function of this paradise lost as any of the political or economic disruptors that pundits shout about in their deafening drivel. Absent a heartfelt affinity for the beauty and miracles of the natural world, not only do the hidden presences around us grow silent, but also those in our souls.
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