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Sisyphus. The whole joy of silence is that his destiny is his.
His rock is his thing. In the same way, when the absurd ponders his pain, he silences all idols. The absurd man knows that he is the master of his own life.
I left Sisyphus at the foot of the mountain! We always see the weight on him. And Sisyphus tells us that the highest piety is to deny the gods and remove stones.
He also considers himself happy. This world, which has no ruler from now on, is neither a desert nor a fertile ground for him. Every grain on this boulder, every mineral sand on this swarthy mountain forms a world only for Sisyphus.
The struggle he had to fight to the top of the mountain was enough in itself to fill a person's heart.
Camus. He wants true salvation not to win after fighting, but to be able to find the strength of life and peace of mind in the midst of suffering. The stone of Sisyphus is a source of misery and a pedal to happiness.
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Sisyphus was the founder and king of Corinth, because Sisyphus offended the gods and was punished by the gods for pushing a boulder to the top of a mountain.
The Story of Sisyphus:
Sisyphus is a figure from Greek mythology, similar to the more tragic Oedipus king, the founder and king of Corinth. He even kidnapped the Grim Reaper at one point, leaving the world without death.
Eventually, Sisyphus offended the gods, who punished him by asking him to push a boulder up to the top of the mountain, and because the boulder was so heavy, he rolled down the mountain before he could reach the top.
He did it again and again, never on end, and God thought there was no more severe punishment than for such futile and hopeless labor. Sisyphus's life was slowly consumed in such an ineffective and hopeless toil.
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Sisyphus is a character in Greek mythology who was punished for offending the gods by pushing a boulder from the foot of a mountain to the top of a very steep mountain, because the stone was so huge that every time he was pushed to the top of Mount Kosi, Sisyphus would watch the stone roll back to the bottom of the mountain, and Sisyphus had to go back to the foot of the mountain and push the boulder up, day after day, year after year. In many philosophical treatises and literary works, Sisyphus represents that there is no hope of repeating meaningless things, and that there is no choice.
Is Sisyphus really meaningless? I think, if you look at each push separately, each push is a success, then how many times did Sisyphus succeed? If you can relax and enjoy all kinds of scenery when you go down the mountain, and if it is possible, record your own mood and feelings, and then reduce and reduce, the ideological system formed over thousands of years and tens of thousands of years will also be very bright.
I don't know what other resources Sisyphus might have caught. As an ordinary person, complex repetition is a large part of life, this part is not necessarily meaningless, do what you can do well, do what you can do, this is far better than being lifeless and depressed and being pushed and dragged by life, and it will definitely be a lot happier.
Short Tales of Ancient Greek Mythology: The Tale of Sisyphus.
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