You might as well just give up, if you're going to throw up roadblocks to any information.
If you're an able-bodied person wanting to leave town, you can find a way to get a few hundred dollars to buy an old car. Or better yet, just take a bus. That's even cheaper. If you can't find a way, then your brain is not working.
Unless you're on your deathbed, there are ways around roadblocks. I've been around a lot of them. People will do what they have to in order to survive.
Many years ago, I was listening to the police on my scanner around 3AM. A police officer reported seeing a guy pushing a dresser down the middle of the street. It turned out to be a known poor person who was moving. He was moving one piece at a time by himself from one apartment to another one several miles away.
Seems pretty awful that it had to come to those circumstances for that guy! So you think that because there are so many roadblocks, the world would be better if people did more to take them down?
Moving at night makes me think that he was skipping out on rent. He seemed slow, but I believe he was working the welfare system. His girlfriend was really slow. And her boobs hung down to her knees. The houses they lived in were torn down not long after he moved. I don't know what happened to the rest of the people on that block.
A lot of roadblocks are caused by thoughts of inadequacy and lack of initiative. Many people wait on someone else to provide for them, rather than go get things for themselves. I always went after things I wanted, in spite of being an Aspie (although I didn't know what it was at the time). I would research and ask others what I needed to do, and then I took their advice. I had zero money in school, but the guidance counsellor told me step by step exactly what I needed to do to get into college, even down to telling to get my photo done at a studio for my college application.
I'm old and have been through a lot. I hate when someone rejects every single bit of advice I offer.
You might as well just give up, if you're going to throw up roadblocks to any information.
If you're an able-bodied person wanting to leave town, you can find a way to get a few hundred dollars to buy an old car. Or better yet, just take a bus. That's even cheaper. If you can't find a way, then your brain is not working.
That's my whole point. There are always roadblocks.
Unless you're on your deathbed, there are ways around roadblocks. I've been around a lot of them. People will do what they have to in order to survive.
Many years ago, I was listening to the police on my scanner around 3AM. A police officer reported seeing a guy pushing a dresser down the middle of the street. It turned out to be a known poor person who was moving. He was moving one piece at a time by himself from one apartment to another one several miles away.
Seems pretty awful that it had to come to those circumstances for that guy! So you think that because there are so many roadblocks, the world would be better if people did more to take them down?
Moving at night makes me think that he was skipping out on rent. He seemed slow, but I believe he was working the welfare system. His girlfriend was really slow. And her boobs hung down to her knees. The houses they lived in were torn down not long after he moved. I don't know what happened to the rest of the people on that block.
A lot of roadblocks are caused by thoughts of inadequacy and lack of initiative. Many people wait on someone else to provide for them, rather than go get things for themselves. I always went after things I wanted, in spite of being an Aspie (although I didn't know what it was at the time). I would research and ask others what I needed to do, and then I took their advice. I had zero money in school, but the guidance counsellor told me step by step exactly what I needed to do to get into college, even down to telling to get my photo done at a studio for my college application.
I'm old and have been through a lot. I hate when someone rejects every single bit of advice I offer.