Health: Proofs for Positivity
Aesthetic: Being hotter and making things around you better is a definition of fun and goodness.
Christian: God is in Heaven. All will be right with the world in the end. Avoiding sin and being holy is freedom from fear of death, and that is life.
Commonsense: Feel better = do more = fix stuff and feel more better.
Dark Psychology: Be a greater specimen than people who deserve to be inferior.
Factual: There is no way but forward.
Fear: How quickly is what you do to yourself racking up its inevitable consequences? Will those whose seriousness you deny therefore be the worst? How much have you lost that you might never know?
Hedonistic: How long have you wished that a cup of something was more effective than a gallon? Dopamine gets stale. Meat gets old. Doing bad things to yourself is bad, and not even a mongoloid can run away from that forever (however much they and their fetish-glorifications try). You will inevitably end up living exclusively in what you try to escape. That is the definition of justice.
Logic: Better managing heart rate = not focusing on your heart rate. Better managing stress = not thinking about it. It doesn’t matter how much you complain about something (yes, anything), if you are a participant and don’t do anything more, it would be exactly that kind of trashy state for you to not see or accept that you’re obviously an active sponsor and spreader of the problem itself.
Pain: How many people have you lost to a problem you are now weirdly, badly effortlessly getting under yourself? How much do you know, how much can’t you laugh about, and how much are you left alone with because you can never tell anyone without implicating yourself and/or being immoral? Are you even still you?
Physical: Engaging the body is literally engaging with reality. Watch your rates of dissociation plummet when outside of infinite plastic abstraction (even if it only exists as a zombified disconnect button).
Political: Things suck less > things suck. Anything that doesn’t have answers or solutions is by-definition wrong. Our “culture” is liberally subhuman and can’t address any basic problems of the human condition because it would by-definition tank its entire movement; why not get an advantage?
Pragmatic: Might as well be happier and do better by yourself. Literally, why not?
Professional: The vast majority of the human experience overlaps with something else. Getting healthier will make you better at that one thing you do/really like by extension.
Profit: More positivity, self-confidence, etc. = greater consideration by your (well-adjusted) peers. Smiles make a lot more money than frowns.
Psychological: Ultimately, when faced with what you know good and well is ‘what you’re supposed to do’—traditional morality CANNOT be avoided—all you have left is be willingly ignorant or self-refutingly, avoidantly, in denial. That is both deranged on its face and results in such in action.
Romantic: Be better, earn better, get better, do better, make better. Exponential.
Science: Modern soft science has lent a great deal of credence to the correlation between overall emotional, social, behavioral health—optimism being one example—and health outcomes in both the short- and long-term. This includes effects like bad moods incurring degrees of social rejection, whether spoken or unspoken. That doesn’t mean bad feelings are always bad, just that bad mental states take a real toll (alongside anything else they result in); the happy nun usually outlives the dour nun, and within that usually by a noticeable length of time.


