NO they shouldnt... just look to the future thats soon going to be your past?
2007-02-08 17:12:36
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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We can learn a lot from the past. For some people the past is much better than the future is likely to be e.g. old and ill,lost entire family in some disaster and left disabled yourself.
But nothing can alter the past and while its natural to have regrets about somethings, we are also very good at forgetting the reality of the past. It may be romantic to remember 'the good old days' but all stages of life have their imperfections. Its just that whatever we're struggling with at present feels worse.
You might also want to mention the effect of faith on people's outlook Whither religious or not we all have some ideas of death. If death is the end the past may well be more attractive but if there is a happy future after death then the past may be easier to give up.
The obvious short answer is no. Life should be lived in the present. The past has gone and we may not live long enough to enjoy our future plans. The interesting thing is that this is so hard to do. whither we look back or dream of future happiness the only thing we can be sure of or influence is the present. Enjoy life NOW.
2007-02-08 21:04:05
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Nostalgia is a very powerful emotion. It clouds the memory though and makes people believe that some time in their past was better than the present. Most people in the UK are far better off today than they were ten, twenty or thirty years ago. The 60's seem to be the perfect decade, but people forget the brewing industrial strife and the problems in society caused by the hippy type attitude to work. The amount of substances available on the street was nothing like it is today. Substance misuse was bred from liberal 60's attitudes in the West. Today we are the victims of that liberalism. The summers were not longer and the size of a mars bar has not decreased. Spending power is higher now, if you 'whiskey score'. This is the method of calculating how long the average worker had to work to be able to buy a bottle of whiskey. Wages have increased more than prices and more people can afford to holiday abroad than ever could before. More people fly now to holiday and more people can afford cars, which, in comparison are cheaper, safer and more easy to maintain. The quality of housing is way beyond what it has ever been in the past. People are healthier and better served by the NHS, despite what politicians would have you believe. Education is, in the main, better and job opportunities more varied. All forms of entertainment are improved because we as consumers have been exposed to more choice and we know what we like. Sport is better, athletes are fitter, sportsmen are better prepared and better protected by the rules. The standard of football in the UK was brutal compared to today. Nostalgia is not for me. Okay, so I fell in love at first sight in the 60's, she was a doll but it couldn't last. I look back with pleasure but I would not want to go back. My life today is as good as it gets. Retired at 48, computer literate, wide experience in life that has prepared me for Yahoo Answers and the bestest colliedog in the world. Oh, and a lovely wife and extended family, away from my own abusive family. Go back? NO WAY PEDRO!!
2007-02-09 03:16:41
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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From my own adventure, a individual shouldn't. I continually bear in concepts the days that I had a pair years in the past. on occasion, I merely choose and need that the sensation I as quickly as had can come back, yet i be attentive to it won't. even nonetheless i be attentive to that i'm dropping my time, I nevertheless have that feeling. i do no longer think of that a individual could yearn for the previous too lots. i think of you are able to yearn for the previous purely somewhat so as that the situation which you deared the main can take place back on your destiny.
2016-11-02 23:05:24
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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The obvious answer to this would be no, but it isn't that simple.
There are some people who live with regrets over something they didn't do when they had the opportunity; try telling THEM not to dwell on the past. We can put these things out of our mind and convince ourselves that we are OK and that we can now move on but there will always be something to awaken those thoughts, it may be a tune or a smell or a film, then we plunge straight back into despair, as if we'd never left it. I can speak with experience. I know that the best thing is to move on but my mind/senses won't listen.
2007-02-08 18:41:03
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answer #5
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answered by ☞H.Potter☜ 6
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No. What good is that going to do anyone? Lessons can certainly be learned from history, but yearning for something in the past will help no one. The future holds the key. Look to authors such as Martin Luther King and George Orwell to see how looking to the future is far more helpful than than yearning for the past.
2007-02-08 16:04:44
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Attempting to relive your past is stupid when the future could hold much better experiences.
2007-02-08 15:56:17
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answer #7
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answered by dardekkis 4
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You sound as if you think it should be compulsory.
2007-02-08 16:03:10
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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grasshopper,
there is only now.
buddha
2007-02-08 16:21:58
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answer #9
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answered by ... 7
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