Many things that we encounter in our lives, as we are told, are instilled in us with the best intentions, for example, for the purpose of education.
But, in fact, it is bad when something like this is done by people who do not think about the consequences, for example, instilling in other people. like a branch of a fruit tree a feeling of guilt.
It can be something harmless at first glance, like a periodic reminder that you once climbed into the pantry without asking and broke a jar of jam.
A feeling of guilt can even be instilled by a children's proverb that a player of hide-and-seek says, standing with his eyes closed and waiting for everyone to have managed to hide.
He says the following phrase: One, two, three, four, five, I'm going to look! Who did not have time to hide, it is not my fault!
It is strange that one can allow a feeling of guilt to arise in such a situation.
When a grandmaster in a chess game feels guilty for having taken the opponent's unattended queen, it sounds strange, and sometimes it may be said that it is unsportsmanlike.
People often want to be around those who feel guilty towards them, and it is a great pleasure to their hearts to hear constant remorse.
You know, guilt is the mooring line that holds a ship tightly to the bollards set up in the graveyard of ships.
Guilty without guilt, a familiar phrase?
But it is actively and often cultivated in different areas of life.
If our guilt is fat, well-fed, constant, it will suit many.
A constant feeling of guilt, which is not easy to get rid of, is often noticeable even in Christians, whom God has freed from all guilt, they have become pure, but some anchor from the past keeps them from flapping their wings and feeling the incredible lightness of the absence of any guilt.
Zoom in on a photo for a closer view.