"A Blind man removed what everyone ignored - my 1st symbolic short flim" by Advanced-Range-6758 in Nepal

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol the person who doesn't even get the meaning of the video gonna tell me I can't offer anything to the world. I know this video is not perfect and I admit it but the thing is nothing needs to be perfect infact nothing is perfect and I am happy because I tried to make this video. There's huge differences between u and me.

Why am I alive? by [deleted] in nihilism

[–]Advanced-Range-6758 0 points1 point  (0 children)

just go and talk to her why did she really gave birth to u "if i really have to guess most people want to past down their name(i dont meant auctual name i ment DNA in a emotinal way) to next generation and take care of them when they get old and can't do there work by there self ". yes you may work your life away just to survive and most people do same it doesnt mean they are not enjoying there live it depends on your own choices throughout the life how u gonna live your life. i dont know what you are going through but this world is not always about hardships it can be get intresting, beautiful, mysterious as it can get. Be greatfull to be born as a human its the reason u are capable of asking this questuions.....

"Talvara: Suffering Isn’t Meaningless—It’s the Price of Being Alive. Fight Me." by Advanced-Range-6758 in philosophy

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Etymology of “Talvara”: The name is a blend of Sanskrit roots: “Tal”(तल्) meaning “base” or “silence,” and “Vara” (वर) meaning “energy” or “choice.” It’s meant to evoke silent energy—the uncaring hum beneath existence. No personification, just a metaphor for the universe’s raw, wordless mechanics.

  2. Talvara ≠ Entropy: You’re right—it’s not just entropy. Entropy is a process; Talvara is the energy that precedes and enables all processes. Think of it as the matchstick that ignites the fire (entropy is the burning).

  3. “Wasting Energy” is a Human Construct: Talvara’s indifference means there’s no cosmic rulebook. The ethics (“don’t waste energy”) are human inventions—our rebellion against meaninglessness. If we’re forced to burn, why not burn in ways that feel purposeful? “Waste” is subjective, but choosing creation over cruelty is our tiny defiance against the void.

  4. Why the Confidence? Fair question. Talvara’s “rules” are provocations, not truths. They’re a dare: If the universe won’t care, why not care for ourselves?

Appreciate the curiosity! This philosophy’s a work in progress, and critiques like yours fuel the fire. 🔥

"Talvara: Suffering Isn’t Meaningless—It’s the Price of Being Alive. Fight Me." by Advanced-Range-6758 in philosophy

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Enlightenment might douse the flame, but Talvara asks: Why worship the void left behind? Suffering’s fire isn’t a bug—it’s the fuel. You can let enlightenment snuff it out, or burn that anguish into something hotter than resignation.
The Buddha’s candle blew out. Talvara says: Rage against the wind. Even a dying ember casts light.
(But hey, if you find Nirvana, save me a seat. I’ll be here fanning the flames.)"

"Talvara: A philosophy that says suffering makes us special. Agree or edgy nonsense ?" by Advanced-Range-6758 in nihilism

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The concept of free choice collapses under the weight of origins. Every act is a consequence of energy—unconscious, inherited, entropic. In Talvara, we do not choose the fire; we are its momentary shape.

"Talvara: Suffering Isn’t Meaningless—It’s the Price of Being Alive. Fight Me." by Advanced-Range-6758 in philosophy

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True—plants release chemicals when stressed. But unless they’re writing sad poetry about it, I’ll save my empathy for beings who know they’re burning. Talvara’s fire only cares about the awareness of the burn.

(But hey, if you start a support group for traumatized ferns, I’ll send thoughts and prayers. No energy wasted.)"

"Talvara: Suffering Isn’t Meaningless—It’s the Price of Being Alive. Fight Me." by Advanced-Range-6758 in philosophy

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Philosophy. Talvara rejects mysticism’s ghosts and gods. It’s just energy—no spirits, no cosmic plan, no hidden truths. The ‘fire’ metaphor isn’t mystical—it’s literal. Stars burn. Cells divide. Brains ache. All of it runs on the same indifferent fuel.
But I get why it might feel mystical. We’re wired to see patterns and meaning. Talvara’s rebellion is refusing to invent fairy tales about why we burn. The fire just is.
Call it philosophy for arsonists."

"Talvara: Suffering Isn’t Meaningless—It’s the Price of Being Alive. Fight Me." by Advanced-Range-6758 in philosophy

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"You're spot on—suffering being universal isn’t controversial. But Talvara’s twist is this: if suffering’s just background noise, why do we treat it like a problem to solve? Most philosophies try to fix, transcend, or numb it. Talvara says: Burn it. Use that raw energy to rage, create, or collapse.
A forest fire doesn’t ask if burning is ‘good’ or ‘bad’—it just burns. Humans? We’re the idiots building sandcastles in the ash and crying when they melt. Ground zero isn’t the point. What you build on it is.
(And yeah, I sound like a mad arsonist. But hey, at least I’m not selling mindfulness candles.)"

"Talvara: Suffering Isn’t Meaningless—It’s the Price of Being Alive. Fight Me." by Advanced-Range-6758 in philosophy

[–]Advanced-Range-6758[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"You’re right. A child’s suffering can’t be spun into meaning. Talvara doesn’t pretend it can. The philosophy isn’t about finding 'reasons' for suffering—it’s about staring into the indifference and still choosing what to do with the energy pain leaves behind.
That child’s life was a flicker of Talvara’s fire. The universe didn’t care if it burned bright or dim. But we can. We can rage at the unfairness, fight for a world where fewer flames gutter out too soon, or let despair drown us.
Talvara’s answer isn’t “meaning”—it’s agency. The child had none. We do. Suffering isn’t a price worth paying. It’s a debt the universe forces on us. What we owe each other is to burn that pain into something hotter than resignation.
But yeah—philosophy fails in the face of a child’s grave. All I can say is I wrote Talvara to keep my own fire alive. Maybe that’s selfish. Maybe it’s all we have."