AndyinIowa
Silver Member
Paranoia or paranoid behavior (not talking about a clinical diagnosis here, just when referring to people's behavior) is a very overused description of 'perceived excessive preparation'.
When it comes to guns, what one person calls 'being prepared' is another persons 'paranoid behavior'. People struggle to see eye to eye when it comes to 'how to prepare for an event that doesn't have 100% probability of happening.'
Take death as an example. Noone will call you paranoid for buying a cemetary plot. Its inevitable you'll be using it.
Guns, generators, and spare tires are all examples of items that may or may not be used in your lifetime. I know people gnash their teeth at the word 'fear' as a motivation to purchase said items, but being prepared is actually addressing adversion or fear of the event happening. If I had no adversions to the power going out, I would have no personal motivation for buying a generator.
Obviously many items have multiple uses (buying a generator for remote work is an example).
Some people have stronger aversions to events than other people. A lot of that is coming out in this post. I'm not sure that everyone is capable of finding a middle ground, but it IS great to live in a country where there are guns, generators, and spare tires for those who choose to take steps to prepare themselves for future possible events!
I get a kick out of people who state 'people who own guns are living in fear.' If people are compelled to purchase a weapon for protection, they have actively addressed their aversion. They have moved to the 'prepared' stage for a potential event. They sleep much better!
Disclaimer: Before people jump on stuff I said, I made the assumption that the guns in discussion were not purchased for the purpose of collecting, investing, hunting, or scientific purposes. =)
Iowa Andy
Iowa Andy
When it comes to guns, what one person calls 'being prepared' is another persons 'paranoid behavior'. People struggle to see eye to eye when it comes to 'how to prepare for an event that doesn't have 100% probability of happening.'
Take death as an example. Noone will call you paranoid for buying a cemetary plot. Its inevitable you'll be using it.
Guns, generators, and spare tires are all examples of items that may or may not be used in your lifetime. I know people gnash their teeth at the word 'fear' as a motivation to purchase said items, but being prepared is actually addressing adversion or fear of the event happening. If I had no adversions to the power going out, I would have no personal motivation for buying a generator.
Obviously many items have multiple uses (buying a generator for remote work is an example).
Some people have stronger aversions to events than other people. A lot of that is coming out in this post. I'm not sure that everyone is capable of finding a middle ground, but it IS great to live in a country where there are guns, generators, and spare tires for those who choose to take steps to prepare themselves for future possible events!
I get a kick out of people who state 'people who own guns are living in fear.' If people are compelled to purchase a weapon for protection, they have actively addressed their aversion. They have moved to the 'prepared' stage for a potential event. They sleep much better!
Disclaimer: Before people jump on stuff I said, I made the assumption that the guns in discussion were not purchased for the purpose of collecting, investing, hunting, or scientific purposes. =)
Iowa Andy
Iowa Andy